SOLUTION: I am having issues understanding how and when to "reorder the operations". It appears when the reorder of operations is done that all expressions with a letter get moved to the ri

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Question 439478: I am having issues understanding how and when to "reorder the operations". It appears when the reorder of operations is done that all expressions with a letter get moved to the right and all subtraction problems get changed to additions problems. What are the rules of this?
Answer by MathLover1(20850) About Me  (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website!
first something about the ORDER OF OPERATIONS RULES
When performing more than one operation on an algebraic expression, work out the operations and signs in the following order:
First calculate powers and roots.
Then perform all multiplication and division.
Finally, finish with addition and subtraction.
Order of operations are a set of rules that mathematicians have agreed to follow to avoid mass CONFUSION when simplifying mathematical expressions or equations.

easier way to remember the ORDER OF OPERATIONS RULES
For those of you that remember best with acronyms:
Please+Excuse+My+Dear+Aunt+Sally (PEMDAS)
Please ...=>...Parentheses
Escuse...=>...Exponents
My ...=>...Multiplication
Dear ...=>...Division
Aunt ...=>...Addition
Sally ...=>...Subtraction
now, about the RE-ORDER OF OPERATIONS RULES
the Associative Property, the commutative property, and the distributive property-three basic properties of numbers- allow you to move+stuff+around, regroup, all without affecting the result

the Associative Property-Use the associative property to change the grouping in an algebraic expression to make the work tidier or more convenient.

The commutative property makes working with algebraic expressions easier. The commutative property changes the order of some numbers in an operation to make the work tidier or more convenient — all without affecting the result.
Addition: a+%2B+b+=+b+%2B+a
Example: 4+%2B+5+=+9 and 5+%2B+4+=+9, so 4+%2B+5+=+5+%2B+4
Reordering the numbers doesn%27t affect the result.

Multiplication:a+%2A+b+=+b+%2A+a
Subtraction: a+%96+b+ is not equal to +b+%96+a+(except in a few special cases)
Example: (–5) – (+2) = (–7) and (+2) – (–5) = +7, so (–5) – (+2) is not equal to (+2) – (–5)
Here, you see how subtraction doesn%27t follow the commutative property.
Exception: If a and b are the same number, then the subtraction appears to be commutative because switching the order doesn’t change the answer.
Example: 2 –2 = 0 and –2 + 2 = 0, so 2 –2 = –2 + 2


Division: a+%3Ab+not=+b+%F7+a (except in a few special cases)
Example: %28-6%29+%3A+%28%2B1%29+=+-6 and %28%2B1%29+%3A+%28-6%29+=+-1%2F6, so %28-6%29+%F7+%28%2B1%29 is not equal to %28%2B1%29+%2F+-6%29
Division also doesn%27t follow the commutative property.
Exception: If a and b are opposites, then you get –1 no matter which order you divide them in.
Example: 2 : –2 = –1 and –2:2 = –1, so 2:–2 = –2 :2