Comment on SBA #119 maths

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Mistic@lemmy.world ⁨1⁩ ⁨week⁩ ago

Not really.

Math, at it’s basis, doesn’t have an order of operation, as I’ve illustrated in my previous comment by breaking the left-to-right rule, doing addition before multiplication and ignoring brackets until the very end.

It only exists as a method of teaching students because it works.

Instead, mathematicians have derived the basic properties that are supposed to be taught to students later on and is pretty much the first thing you learn in mathematical analysis in uni.

Those are:

Sometimes, you can also encounter the property of “inversion,” but it’s a derivative of “identity”: a+(-a)=0 | a×(1/a)=1

This is what math is. Every equation is solved using those properties. Every theorem can be broken down into those actions.

This is why in GEMA, BODMAS, etc, you have multiplication and division before addition and subtraction. Because (a×b)+c=a×(b+c) isn’t a property that exists. Try it. They won’t always be equal.

And those properties are also the reason why you don’t have to abide by an order of operations. Commutative and associative properties directly contradict them without making the solutions incorrect.

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