this post was submitted on 12 Dec 2023
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FACT CHECK 3/5
The rules are in every high school Maths textbook. The notation for your country is in your country's Maths textbooks
1+1=2 by definition (or whatever the notation is in your country). If you write 1+1=3 then that is wrong by definition
And you seem to have included most of them so far - "implicit multiplication", "weak juxtaposition", "conventions", etc.
Spoiler alert: It's always the latter
In fact what would happen is now people wouldn't know in what order to do division and subtraction, having removed them from the mnemonic (and there's absolutely no reason at all to remove them - you can do everything in the mnemonic order and it works, provided you also obey the left-to-right rule, which is there to make sure you obey left associativity)
That's not true at all. Have you not read through some of these arguments? They're all full of "Use BEDMAS!", "Use PEMDAS!", "It's PEMDAS not BEDMAS!" - quite clearly these people DID learn order of operations through the mnemonics
There's no requirement to memorise any acronym - you can always just make up your own if you find that easier! I did that a lot in university to remember things during the exam
...because a product is a Term, and to insert a x would break it into 2 Terms
A product is the result of a multiplication
Exact same reason. They are saying "don't turn 1 term into 2 terms". To put that into the words that you keep using, "don't use weak juxtaposition"
Because it would break the rule of left associativity (i.e. left to right). No-one is advocating "multiplication before division" where it would violate left to right (usually by "multiplication" they're actually referring to Terms, and yes, you literally always have to do Terms before Division)
Yes there is. Some countries use : for divide, whereas other countries use it for ratio
Name one! Give me a reference! There's nothing forbidding that in Maths (though we would more usually write it as 12/(6x2)). Again, all you have to do is obey left to right
...Terms. Same as all textbooks do now
...Terms, the already-existing rule that he apparently didn't know about (he mentions them, and products, but manages to completely miss what that actually means)
Something, something, Distributive Law (yes, some people use the wrong name, but in talking about the property, not the law, you're knocking down a strawman)
...and The Distributive Law applies to every bracketed term that has a coefficient, in this case it's 2(1+2)
And The Distributive Law has everything to do with order of operations, since solving Brackets is literally the first step!
Maybe you should've asked someone. Hint: textbooks/teachers
Here it is again, textbook references, proofs, memes, the works
Bingo! Distribution isn't Multiplication
...distribute the 2, always
It has everything to do with there being a coefficient to the brackets, the 2
...it's a factorised term, and the opposite of factorising is The Distributive Law
No, it forces distribution of the coefficient. a(b+c)=(ab+ac)
...it is a factorised term subject to The Distributive Law
They're NOT 2 separate numbers. It's a single, factorised term, in the same way that 2a is a single term, and in this case a is equal to (1+2)!
Because 2π is a single term, by definition (it's the product of a multiplication), as is r itself, so that should actually be written r=(C/2π)
Incorrect. Only the first one is a term/product (not separated by any operators) - the last 2 are multiplications, and the 2nd one is literally meaningless. Space isn't defined as meaning anything in Maths
The first is a fraction
The second is a division
The third is also a fraction
The last is a multiplication by a fraction
Creates ambiguity since space isn't defined to mean anything in Maths. Looks like a typo - was there meant to be a multiply where the space is? Or was there not meant to be a space??
By definition ab^-1^=a^1^b^-1^=(a/b)