Recommended Posts

Typical 5th grade math, I guess no one is smarter than a 5th grader.

It is? I don't recall having a detailed discussion on the presidence of distributive multiplication versus standard multiplication in my 5th grade class. Also those who take the grade school PEMDAS a bit too literally can find themselves in trouble.

If I ever saw an equation written in the format of this one on an exam, I would ask the professor for clarification as to whether (9+3) were in the numerator or the denominator. Unless it was an intentional tricky question on a somewhat obscure presidence rule that seems pretty reasonable to me.

I also would not be surprised to see marks taken off of my work if I were to answer with an equation in this format, rather than in a much clearer fraction form.

It is? I don't recall having a detailed discussion on the presidence of distributive multiplication versus standard multiplication in my 5th grade class. Also those who take the grade school PEMDAS a bit too literally can find themselves in trouble.

If I ever saw an equation written in the format of this one on an exam, I would ask the professor for clarification as to whether (9+3) were in the numerator or the denominator. Unless it was an intentional tricky question on a somewhat obscure presidence rule that seems pretty reasonable to me.

I also would not be surprised to see marks taken off of my work if I were to answer with an equation in this format, rather than in a much clearer fraction form.

I must admit, I'm not too familiar with the precedence of the distributive property in the order of operations, do you have any links to anywhere I can read about it?

By the way, what did you think the answer was?

I must admit, I'm not too familiar with the precedence of the distributive property in the order of operations, do you have any links to anywhere I can read about it?

By the way, what did you think the answer was?

LeeDogg's post on the second page: http://www.purplemath.com/modules/orderops2.htm (It's the 5th green equation).

At first I thought the answer was 288. By the order of operations I've been taught, the 2(9+3) becomes 2*12, and then you do multiplication and division in the same step from left to right. The other way to look at it is that 2(9+3) is a factoring of (18+6), and the rule about distributive presidence would confirm that.

My position though is still that the original equation is ambiguous.

48/[(2(9+3)] is a much better way to write it if you intend the answer to be 2.

48(9+3)/2 is a much better way to write it if you intend the answer to be 288.

Basically the answer depends on what rule you use. There is no universal way of calculating an equation that has not been configured using a universal format.

Agreed 100%

It's first and foremost a formatting issue. There is more than one reasonable way to interpret that equation into a more standard format.

I'll assume the answer is in fact 288.

Based on that logic, then I will let X = (9+3).

In order for 288 to be the correct answer, the equation becomes 48/2*X = 24*X = 288.

Apply this to a generic algebraic example now, such as X/3X.

This is easily solvable as 1/3.

According to the above example, it would become X/3*X = X?/3.

I've never seen single line algebra done this way. It is excessively convoluted.

LeeDogg's post on the second page: http://www.purplemath.com/modules/orderops2.htm (It's the 5th green equation).

At first I thought the answer was 288. By the order of operations I've been taught, the 2(9+3) becomes 2*12, and then you do multiplication and division in the same step from left to right. The other way to look at it is that 2(9+3) is a factoring of (18+6), and the rule about distributive presidence would confirm that.

My position though is still that the original equation is ambiguous.

48/[(2(9+3)] is a much better way to write it if you intend the answer to be 2.

48(9+3)/2 is a much better way to write it if you intend the answer to be 288.

The distributive property precedence is the way I read it as well, so I would have come up with 2 as the answer with the formula as provided. It's been quite a while since I took math, but I really don't think this is as ambiguous as some have stated here as the distributive rules clearly apply.

My answer would be 2.

Not because multiplication takes precedence over division.

My reason is summarized here >

Therefore,

48?2(9+3) = 2

48?2*(9+3) = 288

This is because I understand an algebraic statement 2x to be equal to 2(x), and this takes priority over regular multiplication and division. Therefore, 9?2x is equivalent to 9?2(x) which gives me 4.5 / x, instead of 4.5(x).

To further support the 2 answer, I think a key factor here is that the distributive law of multiplication does NOT work for division

The Distributive Law does not work for division:

Example:

24 / (4 + 8) = 24 / 12 = 2, but

24 / 4 + 24 / 8 = 6 + 3 = 9

http://www.mathsisfun.com/associative-commutative-distributive.html

So therefore per the distributive law of multiplication only the 2 can be distributed and since Parenthesis come first, the expression (2x9 + 2x3) needs to be calculated FIRST, before it can be divided into 48.

Using the wording from that site, I believe this expression would read as 48 divided by the sum of 2 lots of 9 plus 2 lots of 3.

The distributive property precedence is the way I read it as well, so I would have come up with 2 as the answer with the formula as provided. It's been quite a while since I took math, but I really don't think this is as ambiguous as some have stated here as the distributive rules clearly apply.

Yeah this is what I think now. Although, 20 minutes ago I didn't

I've been reading up on multiplication by juxtaposition which apparently should take precedence over any other multiplication or division

If that's the case then 2(9+3) should be evaluated first.

If I put the equation as it's written into my calculator (Ti-89) then I get 288. However, if I substitute the 9+3 for x and the 2 for y and input 48/y(x) then it uses this juxtaposition rule and gives me gif.latex?\frac{48}{y(x)}

If you substitute the numbers back in then you get png.latex?\frac{48}{2(9+3)}%20=%202

So I'm still not sure, but I'm swaying towards 2.

do people not friggin read?

The expression is 2(9+3)

not (9+3)

So parentheses first is (2 x 9 + 2 x 3) divided into 48

Brackets first :p I can't believe this thread is still going on, especially after the first reply got it right.

Let's see what we have:

48:2*(9+3)

We do brackets first

48:2*(12)

no need for brackets anymore

48:2*12

once each of the operations are of the same level (and multiplication and division are the same level operations), you just do it left to right

48:2*12 = 24*12 = 288

/thread

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • When companies do "opt-out" it's because they know that no one will opt-in...
    • the chip might be a binned 5090 so no, youre actually getting the 5090
    • How to set custom folder icons in Windows 11 File Explorer by Usama Jawad Although there are many third-party tools like Windhawk, FlyOOBE, DeskScapes 2026, and more that can be used to customize and tweak Windows 11 according to your preferences, many people often forget that the operating system natively offers a lot of configurability too. One such handy option is available inside File Explorer, where you can set custom folder icons to personalize your experience very quickly. File Explorer is an interface that Windows 11 users leverage rather heavily, so it can get quite boring looking at default icons. It can also be a bit tedious reading the text of each item to navigate to the folder you need. In cases like these, custom folder icons can come in quite handy as they allow you to not only personalize File Explorer, but also offer meaningful aesthetics that can make navigation quicker. Here is how to configure custom folder icons in Windows 11: Download icon files (.ico) from a third-party website of your choice. There are lots of free options online, like Icon Archive. You'll also be able to download them directly from Google Images Open File Explorer Navigate to the folder you want to customize Right-click the folder Select Properties Go to the Customize tab Select Change Icon If you want, you can select a native icon from the Windows directory, but for the purpose of this guide, we'll select the third-party .ico file that we downloaded. As such, select Browse Navigate to the .ico file and double-click it Click Apply, followed by OK That's all there is to it! It shouldn't take more than a minute after downloading the .ico file of your choice. The good news is also that you are not married to the icon you set; you can restore it to the default icon by simply selecting Restore Defaults in the interface mentioned in step 8. It's a very easy way to customize File Explorer, with any changes in this regard being quickly reversible. I would also recommend using View > Extra large icons in File Explorer so that you can properly enjoy the aesthetics. You can also download the entire Object Desktop package. Object Desktop includes programs such as Fences, Start11, Groupy, SoundPackager, DeskScapes and Multiplicity. Disclaimer: Neowin's relationship to Stardock
    • Teams on macOS has a major bug for some users, and Microsoft is rolling out guidance by Usama Jawad Teams is one of the most used online communication and collaboration tools especially in enterprise and school environments. It is available on a variety of platforms including Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, and the web. As such, it is a major problem when users on any of the aforementioned platforms get affected. In its Message Center advisory MC1392559, Microsoft acknowledged a bug impacting Teams customers on certain versions of macOS a few weeks ago. Basically, if affected users start sharing their screen, they'll see a black or blank screen, experience interruptions while sharing, and even face complete failure in screen sharing functionality. This is impacting customers using macOS versions older than Tahoe 26.4, and PCs which are resource-constrained on disk and memory. Interestingly, the scope of this issue appears to be limited as Microsoft has only listed Government Community Cloud (GCC), GCC High, and Department of Defense (DoD) as the affected platforms. Since it can be confusing to customers when the bug appears randomly and troubleshooting methods aren't always obvious, Microsoft is working on introducing some in-product guidance that automatically gets shown to users when a screen sharing failure is detected. They'll be asked to retry sharing their screen and will also be requested to update their macOS version, when applicable. If that is not possible, the Redmond tech giant has urged users to apply a mitigation that involves navigating to Teams Settings > General > Screen sharing > Use Mac OS native sharing. A restart isn't required. Regardless, Microsoft has recommended IT admins to inform their helpdesks about this issue, update their internal documentation, communicate the problem across the organization, and update macOS Tahoe 26.4 devices, where possible. The in-product guidance will begin rolling out later this month and should hopefully be available to all by mid-August.
    • 150.0.4078.65 secret changelog: New feature: Settings > Copilot and AI > Allow Cowork to take actions on your behalf
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      pahariyaseo earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      pahariyaseo earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      hadiaali45 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      arone_24 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Reacting Well
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Reacting Well
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      414
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      143
    3. 3
      Nick H.
      89
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      82
    5. 5
      neufuse
      72
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!