Redirected from Commutative law
The most commonly known examples of commutativity are addition and multiplication of natural numbers; for example:
Further examples of commutative binary operations include addition and multiplication of real and complex numbers, addition of vectors, and intersection and union of sets. Important non-commutative operations are the multiplication of matrices and the composition of functions.
An Abelian group is a group whose operation is commutative.
A ring is called commutative if its multiplication is commutative, since the addition is commutative in any ring.
See also: Associativity, Distributive property
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