Wiki User
∙ 6y agoThose are two completely different operations.
Wiki User
∙ 6y agoWiki User
∙ 6y agoEverything! What is the difference between a jet plane and a glass of water?
Squaring a number is multiplying it by itself. Finding a square root is dividing, trying to find the two numbers that will multiply to make your original number.
The square of number is a *a ( a number times itself ). For example, 4*4=16, so the square of 4 is 16. the square root is the number before you square it. The square root of 16 is 4. It actually simple to remember this way: think of the root as the root of a tree, growing to multiply itself.
There isn't a significant difference, just which ever you prefer.
everything
The main difference is that a square is a geometric shape whereas a rhumbus is a word with no meaning.The main difference between a square and a rhombus is that all the angles of a square are equal. In a rhombus, there are two pairs of equal opposite angles.
The answer to the division is a number (8) that can be added to itself to make 16. The answer to the square root is a number (-4 or +4) that can be multiplied by itself to make 16.
Squaring a number is multiplying it by itself. Finding a square root is dividing, trying to find the two numbers that will multiply to make your original number.
No mathematical difference.
The square of number is a *a ( a number times itself ). For example, 4*4=16, so the square of 4 is 16. the square root is the number before you square it. The square root of 16 is 4. It actually simple to remember this way: think of the root as the root of a tree, growing to multiply itself.
There is no difference between square meters and meters square. for simplicity we use these in different form.
the difference between them is that the bottom face is different one of them is a rectangle and one of them is a square
It is the same as the difference between a blue square and a square.
the difference between them is that the bottom face is different one of them is a rectangle and one of them is a square
square the first term, plus twice the product of the first and the secon, then square the second.
There isn't a significant difference, just which ever you prefer.
No, but a perfect square is usually the square of a whole number.
The only significant difference that I know of is that there is a method, somewhat like long division, that can be used for finding the square root. I am not aware of a similar process for a cube root.