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| Question 663901:  Hello and Happy Tuesday:)
 After my first order of operations, parenthesis, would I consider 5(6)and 12(3)an exponent problem or a multiplication problem.  I copied how I solved, but feel as if I am missing something.
 Mathematical Problem of my own creation
 300 - 5(3+3) = 306 - 12(3)
 First I would solve the problem in parenthesis to simplify then rewrite the equation.
 300 - 5(6) = 306 - 12(3)
 Next I would solve all my multiplication problems to simplify then rewrite the equation.
 300- 30 = 306 - 36
 Finally I would solve all my subtraction problems to come up with the solution to the problem.
 270 = 270
 
 Found 2 solutions by  ewatrrr, Theo:
 Answer by ewatrrr(24785)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website!  Hi,
 Yes.
 "PEMDAS", ( "Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally")
 Order: "Parentheses, Exponents, Multiplication and Division, and Addition and Subtraction".
Answer by Theo(13342)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! it's a multiplication problem. looks like you solved it correctly.
 exponent problem would be something like 5^2 or 5*5 which is the equivalent of 5^2
 something like 5*3^2 would be an exponent problem.
 you would do the exponentiation first and then do the multiplication.
 5*3^2 = 5*9 = 45
 if you did the multiplication first you would be wrong.
 5*3^2 = 15^2 = 225 would be wrong.
 however, if you surrounded the 5*3 with parentheses so it looked like this:
 (5*3)^2, then multiplying 5*3 first would be appropriate.
 
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