• That two numbers applied to division don’t form a term?

    Now you’re getting it! Correct, they don’t. They form an expression. Terms are separated by operators, and joined by grouping symbols. Expressions are made up of terms and operators (since, you know, operators separate terms). I told you way back in the beginning that 1÷2 is 2 terms, and ½ is 1 term. Getting back to the original question, 2(2+2) is 1 term and 2x(2+2) is 2 terms.

    you find yourself an authority that you trust

    Which time that I mentioned textbooks, historical Maths documents, and proofs did you miss?

    university professor

    University professors don’t teach order of operations - high school teachers do. That’s like saying “Ask the English teacher about Maths”.

    If you want to continue this

    Why would I want to when you ignore Maths textbooks and proofs? See my first comment in this post that you’ve finally got the difference now. See ya.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      13 months ago

      They form an expression. Terms are separated by operators, and joined by grouping symbols. Expressions are made up of terms and operators (since, you know, operators separate terms).

      Terms, expressions, symbols, all those are terms about syntax. Not semantics. Do you start to notice something?

      Why would I want to when you ignore Maths textbooks and proofs?

      To learn. I challenge you again to explain the difference between syntax and semantics. Last chance.