If you encounter operators with the same precedence (like multiplication and division) you go by the order they appear in the equation, left to right. That is how it works.
Yes. I am well aware.
6 ÷ 2 * (2+1) = (2+1) * 6 ÷ 2 = (6 * (2+1))÷2 = 6 * (2+1) ÷ 2
What he wanted to do is 6 ÷ (2 * (2+1))
But this just comes down to if you treat 2(2+1) as one or two expressions.
And honestly, i don’t blame anyone for thinking one way or the other. Because i think most people understand that we wanted to write (2(2+1)), just that the overall parentheses is implied
Why i deleted that first comment within seconds was because i saw i had misread the meme as (6÷2)(2(2+1))
The precedences go like this:
parentheses > exponents > (multiplication = division) > (addition = substraction)
If you encounter operators with the same precedence (like multiplication and division) you go by the order they appear in the equation, left to right. That is how it works.
Yes. I am well aware. 6 ÷ 2 * (2+1) = (2+1) * 6 ÷ 2 = (6 * (2+1))÷2 = 6 * (2+1) ÷ 2
What he wanted to do is 6 ÷ (2 * (2+1))
But this just comes down to if you treat 2(2+1) as one or two expressions.
And honestly, i don’t blame anyone for thinking one way or the other. Because i think most people understand that we wanted to write (2(2+1)), just that the overall parentheses is implied
Why i deleted that first comment within seconds was because i saw i had misread the meme as (6÷2)(2(2+1))