Pythagorean theorem The Pythagorean theorem is typically written as a 2 </msup> +

Oakey1w

Oakey1w

Answered question

2022-06-15

Pythagorean theorem
The Pythagorean theorem is typically written as
a 2 + b 2 = c 2
where a and b are the two shorter sides (legs) of a right triangle and c is its longest side (the hypotenuse).
Given the exponent powers c 2 × 1 / 2 = c, why cant I express " a = c b".
The correct answer given was c 2 b 2

Answer & Explanation

timmeraared

timmeraared

Beginner2022-06-16Added 22 answers

You need to think more carefully about what is going on.
Note that
25 = 9 + 16  or  3 2 + 4 2 = 5 2
but it is not true that
3 = 5 4
instead it is true that
3 = 3 2 = 5 2 4 2
Using very simple examples as a check can help you to avoid mistakes, and also to see where the mistake is. But don't rely on them to replace formal arguments - sometimes simple cases miss the point.
vrotterigzl

vrotterigzl

Beginner2022-06-17Added 3 answers

That is because c 2 b 2 is not in general equal to c−b.
If you are raising things to a power, in general you can't do it term by term (just try some explicit examples to see why this is).
In that particular case you can either write a 2 = c 2 b 2 or a = c 2 b 2 .

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