A, B and C.
A, B and C
22.3-9.7
Your calculator will produce 10, but only the first 5 mean anything.
its C :))
22.4-15.1 :)
A, B and C
Yes, 1,003.4 in three significant figures is: 1,000
22.3-9.7
Please don't write "the following" if you don't provide a list.
Your calculator will produce 10, but only the first 5 mean anything.
its C :))
22.4-15.1 :)
donepezil
An expression is any combination of values that can be evaluated. A value can be as a simple as a literal constant (such as the value 42), a variable or a function, or it can be the result of an operation. Simple expressions can be combined with operators to produce more complex expressions. Expressions are evaluated according to the rules of precedence. In mathematics, we use the following order of precedence is: parenthesis, exponent, multiply, divide, add and subtract (which gives us the acronym PEMDAS).
To determine if expressions are equal, simplify both expressions as much as possible and compare their values. You can also substitute specific values for the variables in both expressions; if they yield the same result for all tested values, they may be equal. Additionally, using algebraic techniques such as factoring or applying identities can help establish equality. If both expressions consistently produce the same output across a range of inputs, they are considered equal.
In languages that use a C-style syntax (e.g., C, C++ and Java) all code is written using expressions. Expressions may be combined to produce more complex expressions, however an expression or group of expressions only becomes a statement when terminated by a semi-colon. A group of statements enclosed by braces {} is known as a compound statement or code block.
cumulonimbus