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What would happen if you carried out a division problem with a zero but you continued the promlem so it would otherwise be solvable?

8th Nov 2016, 4:20 PM
Tiny Trees
Tiny Trees - avatar
2 Respuestas
+ 1
That depends if you can rearrange the problem to accommodate the undefined result (like how we carry around "i", for the square root of -1) and resolve it later...or work around the issue. For example in the Taylor series, the derivative shows that you can actually solve the problem when you're technically /0 ... it's continuous and 'bad' terms cancel. http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/792664/taylor-series-of-a-division-by-zero-equation This isn't really basic math though (notice how 0- and 0+ are distinct); if a test asked about this it's probably not looking for a clever answer--it's looking for: "that's undefined".
9th Nov 2016, 9:34 AM
Kirk Schafer
Kirk Schafer - avatar
0
Following the order of operations, it at any time an attempt to divide by zero occurs, it will cause an error.
8th Nov 2016, 6:43 PM
Alex Schrichte
Alex Schrichte - avatar