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  1. arithmetic - What are the formal names of operands and results for ...

    I'm trying to mentally summarize the names of the operands for basic operations. I've got this so far: Addition: Augend + Addend = Sum. Subtraction: Minuend - Subtrahend = Difference. Multiplicati...

  2. arithmetic - Factorial, but with addition - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Apr 21, 2015 · Explore related questions arithmetic factorial See similar questions with these tags.

  3. Is there a 3-term arithmetic progression (AP) of perfect squares such ...

    Jan 21, 2025 · There's more to say about three-term arithmetic progressions of squares, but first a review of Pythagorean triples, which turn out to be closely related to, but better studied than, three …

  4. arithmetic - Rules for rounding (positive and negative numbers ...

    Yonatan: Most of the disagreement anyway is how to handle the case when the digit after the rounding digit is a 5; for the other digits, all seem to be in agreement. I guess the rules are application-dependent!

  5. Arithmetic pattern $1 + 2 = 3$, $4 + 5 + 6 = 7 + 8$, and so on

    Jan 7, 2015 · The other interesting thing here is that 1,2,3, etc. appear in order in the list. And you have 2,3,4, etc. terms on the left, 1,2,3, etc. terms on the right. This should let you determine a formula like …

  6. Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Q&A for people studying math at any level and professionals in related fields

  7. Newest 'arithmetic-derivative' Questions - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Dec 15, 2018 · A conjecture about binary palindromes and arithmetic derivatives Corrected question. From the sequence of binary palindromes A006995 (eg. 1001001001001) the sequence of possible …

  8. Weighted arithmetic mean - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    May 17, 2023 · Weighted arithmetic mean Ask Question Asked 2 years, 9 months ago Modified 2 years, 9 months ago

  9. arithmetic - Multiplication and sequences - Mathematics Stack Exchange

    Jul 29, 2021 · Multiplication can be thought of as repeated addition. For instance, we have $3\\times 2=6$ which is equivalently expressed as $3\\times (1+1)=3+3=6$ Notice that in this definition of …

  10. How can we sum up $\sin$ and $\cos$ series when the angles are in ...

    How can we sum up $\sin$ and $\cos$ series when the angles are in arithmetic progression? Ask Question Asked 15 years, 1 month ago Modified 4 years, 7 months ago