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Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world 19 hours agoThose rules are based on axioms which are used to create statements which are used within proofs. As far as I know statements are pretty common and are a foundational part of all math.
Defining math as a language though is also going to be pointless here. It’s not really a yes or no thing. I’ll say it is a language but sure it’s arguable.
And again laws are created using statements. I have plenty of textbooks that contain “statements”
SmartmanApps@programming.dev 19 hours ago
Nope! The order of operations rules come from the proof of the definitions in the first place. 3x4=3+3+3+3 by definition, therefore if you don’t do the multiplication first in 2+3x4 you get a wrong answer (having changed the multiplicand).
And yet you’ve not been able to quote a Maths textbook using that word.
Expressions are.
It’s really a no thing.
Not the Laws of Maths. e.g. The Distributive Law is expressed with the identity a(b+c)=(ab+ac). An identity is a special type of equation. We have…
Numerals
Pronumerals
Expressions
Equations (or Formula)
Identities
No statements. Everything is precisely defined in Maths, everything has one meaning only.
Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
What is this answer
X^2=4
SmartmanApps@programming.dev 17 hours ago
Yes it is.
Left to right is a convention. Left Associativity is a hard rule. Left to right is a convention which obeys the rule of Left Associativity.
It’s something that is a natural consequence of the definitions of the operators in the first place. As soon as Multiplication was defined in terms of Addition, that guaranteed we would always have to do Multiplication before Addition to get right answers.
Yes it is! All of Maths is universally true! 😂
You know that’s no longer order of operations problem, right?
Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world 16 hours ago
What proof do you have that using a left to right rule is universally true?
From my understanding It’s an agreed convention that is followed which doesn’t make it a universal truth. If we’re all doing it just to make things easier to understand, that implies we could have a right to left rule. It’s also true that not all cultures right in the same way.
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But here is an interesting quote from Florian Cajori in his book a history of mathematical notations.
Lastly here is an article that also highlights the issue.
scienceblogs.com/…/the-horror-of-pemdas