(4 x 4) + (4 / 4)
(9-9)-(9-9)+(9+1)=10
Those are the "terms" of the expression.
10x10x10
The difference between these two is that an expression only contains variables, numbers, and mathematical symbols, and an equation contains two expression with an equal sign that separate them. For example, while an expression is "2x-1", an equation is "2x-1 = 5x."
Yes. Any number, or expression, is equal to itself. An equation such as:x + 5 = x + 5 is true for ANY value of "x".
(4*4)+(4/4) parentheses are not needed
Binary digits are 'bits'. There are only two of them. It doesn't matter what you call your digits or how you write them, as long as you do all of your binary arithmetic with only two symbols.
If symbols do not have an equals then it is an expression.
(9-9)-(9-9)+(9+1)=10
Those are the "terms" of the expression.
you would call that an expression
10x10x10
An expression is any combination of symbols that can be evaluated to a number (or perhaps to some other data type). An equation has an equal sign, and an expression on both sides of the equal sign - it is a claim that the two expressions are equal.
similarity: both involve arithmetic operations and/or functions difference: an equation either produces an answer or shows how two expressions are equal, an expression does not produce an answer and is usually a portion of an equation or a larger expression
In mathematics, such expressions indicate that the value of the expression to the left of the equal sign has the same value as the expression to the right of the equal sign. In some cases, it can also be interpreted to mean that the expression on one side of the equal sign can be used in place of the expression on the other side of the equal sign (say in manipulating algebraic expressions). In computer languages, the equal sign is sometimes also used to indicate that the value of the expression to the right of the equal sign is to be transferred to the location indicated by the expression to the left of the equal sign. The expression to the left of the equal sign is usually a single variable that represents a memory location.
10-4=6-8=(-2)+2+0
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