Math, asked by Tarakeshwararao, 1 year ago

commutative property

Answers

Answered by ramarekha2005
6
The word "commutative" comes from "commute" or "move around", so the Commutative Property is the one that refers to moving stuff around. For addition, the rule is "a + b = b + a"; in numbers, this means 2 + 3 = 3 + 2. For multiplication, the rule is "ab = ba"; in numbers, this means 2×3 = 3×2. Any time they refer to the Commutative Property, they want you to move stuff around; any time a computation depends on moving stuff around, they want you to say that the computation uses the Commutative Property.
Answered by SyedNomanShah
7

Answer:

Commutative property:

A binary operation is commutative if changing the order of the operands does not change the result.

Mathematical Form:

a + b = b + a

a × b = b × a

Hope its helpful for you...✌✌

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