20446
Creativity / Re: The new and improved 3D model topic!
« on: September 20, 2014, 01:45:25 AM »Well the actual thing is a small sportster of a car.but it isn't stubby
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
Well the actual thing is a small sportster of a car.but it isn't stubby
Actually, the answer is not possible, In New Zealand we use BEDMAS, Division then Multiplication. Whereas in America you guys use PEMDAS.as soon as you show me a computer that gives the answer 2, then I will take what you're saying with more than a grain of salt
Any question that resolves around two people who use entirely different order of operations will always have two or more answers.
We need a poll of 288 vs 2 (288 master race)this is like if the whole world was full of blue people entirely and nobody else, and you said "blue people master race"
Division and multiplication are a set, same with addition and subtraction so their order remains the same.you've got the first two parts right. MD and AS are both sets. but their order is not M -> D -> A -> S, it is M/D (left to right) -> A/S (left to right)
6÷2(1+2)9
Look at the pic I just posted and feel better. ;)youre cuter than me too
this is a troll poblemthere is only one answer and it is 288
impossible to know the answer for surelets just say theres 2 answers
there you go the answer is two you monogloids.do you need a 5th grade math remediation course
Oh wait. For some reason I was thinking the / symbol as a horizontal divider and that it meant everything in front of it above it and everything after it below it.the title...?
I've never really used / in actual math before, oops.
I mentioned it because some people were separating them like so: (48/2)*(9+3)right, well, they should be separated like that, except not really
PEMDAS is very flawed in this case.it is not. the teachers who taught it, on the other hand, were
When you have a number directly against a parentheses like that, it's multiplied across the entire contents of the parentheses.
you always multiply before you divide why is this a question?oh my god are you serious right now