
Basic Math & Pre-Algebra For Dummies
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Tips for simplifying tricky basic math and pre-algebra operations
Whether you're a student preparing to take algebra or a parent who wants or needs to brush up on basic math, this fun, friendly guide has the tools you need to get in gear. From positive, negative, and whole numbers to fractions, decimals, and percents, you'll build necessary math skills to tackle more advanced topics, such as imaginary numbers, variables, and algebraic equations.
* Explanations and practical examples that mirror today's teaching methods
* Relevant cultural vernacular and references
* Standard For Dummiesmaterials that match the current standard and design
Basic Math & Pre-Algebra For Dummies takes the intimidation out of tricky operations and helps you get ready for algebra!
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- About This Book
- Foolish Assumptions
- Icons Used in This Book
- Beyond the Book
- Where to Go from Here
- Part 1 Getting Started with Basic Math and Pre-Algebra
- Chapter 1 Playing the Numbers Game
- Inventing Numbers
- Understanding Number Sequences
- Evening the odds
- Counting by threes, fours, fives, and so on
- Getting square with square numbers
- Composing yourself with composite numbers
- Stepping out of the box with prime numbers
- Multiplying quickly with exponents
- Looking at the Number Line
- Adding and subtracting on the number line
- Getting a handle on nothing, or zero
- Taking a negative turn: Negative numbers
- Multiplying the possibilities
- Dividing things up
- Discovering the space in between: Fractions
- Four Important Sets of Numbers
- Counting on the counting numbers
- Introducing integers
- Staying rational
- Getting real
- Chapter 2 It's All in the Fingers: Numbers and Digits
- Knowing Your Place Value
- Counting to ten and beyond
- Telling placeholders from leading zeros
- Reading long numbers
- Close Enough for Rock 'n' Roll: Rounding and Estimating
- Rounding numbers
- Estimating value to make problems easier
- Chapter 3 The Big Four: Addition, Subtraction, Multiplication, and Division
- Adding Things Up
- In line: Adding larger numbers in columns
- Carry on: Dealing with two-digit answers
- Take It Away: Subtracting
- Columns and stacks: Subtracting larger numbers
- Can you spare a ten? Borrowing to subtract
- Multiplying
- Signs of the times
- Memorizing the multiplication table
- Double digits: Multiplying larger numbers
- Doing Division Lickety-Split
- Making short work of long division
- Getting leftovers: Division with a remainder
- Part 2 Getting a Handle on Whole Numbers
- Chapter 4 Putting the Big Four Operations to Work
- Knowing Properties of the Big Four Operations
- Inverse operations
- Commutative operations
- Associative operations
- Distribution to lighten the load
- Doing Big Four Operations with Negative Numbers
- Addition and subtraction with negative numbers
- Multiplication and division with negative numbers
- Understanding Units
- Adding and subtracting units
- Multiplying and dividing units
- Understanding Inequalities
- Doesn't equal (?)
- Less than (&) and greater than (&)
- Less than or equal to (=) and greater than or equal to (=)
- Approximately equals (~)
- Moving Beyond the Big Four: Exponents, Square Roots, and Absolute Value
- Understanding exponents
- Discovering your roots
- Figuring out absolute value
- Chapter 5 A Question of Values: Evaluating Arithmetic Expressions
- Seeking Equality for All: Equations
- Hey, it's just an expression
- Evaluating the situation
- Putting the Three E's together
- Introducing Order of Operations
- Applying order of operations to Big Four expressions
- Using order of operations in expressions with exponents
- Understanding order of precedence in expressions with parentheses
- Chapter 6 Say What? Turning Words into Numbers
- Dispelling Two Myths about Word Problems
- Word problems aren't always hard
- Word problems are useful
- Solving Basic Word Problems
- Turning word problems into word equations
- Plugging in numbers for words
- Solving More-Complex Word Problems
- When numbers get serious
- Too much information
- Putting it all together
- Chapter 7 Divisibility
- Knowing the Divisibility Tricks
- Counting everyone in: Numbers you can divide everything by
- In the end: Looking at the final digits
- Add it up: Checking divisibility by adding up digits
- Ups and downs: Divisibility by 11
- Identifying Prime and Composite Numbers
- Chapter 8 Fabulous Factors and Marvelous Multiples
- Knowing Six Ways to Say the Same Thing
- Connecting Factors and Multiples
- Finding Fabulous Factors
- Deciding when one number is a factor of another
- Understanding factor pairs
- Generating a number's factors
- Identifying prime factors
- Finding the greatest common factor (GCF)
- Making Marvelous Multiples
- Generating multiples
- Finding the least common multiple (LCM)
- Part 3 Parts of the Whole: Fractions, Decimals, and Percents
- Chapter 9 Fooling with Fractions
- Slicing a Cake into Fractions
- Knowing the Fraction Facts of Life
- Telling the numerator from the denominator
- Flipping for reciprocals
- Using ones and zeros
- Mixing things up
- Knowing proper from improper
- Increasing and Reducing Terms of Fractions
- Increasing the terms of fractions
- Reducing fractions to lowest terms
- Converting between Improper Fractions and Mixed Numbers
- Knowing the parts of a mixed number
- Converting a mixed number to an improper fraction
- Converting an improper fraction to a mixed number
- Understanding Cross-multiplication
- Making Sense of Ratios and Proportions
- Chapter 10 Parting Ways: Fractions and the Big Four Operations
- Multiplying and Dividing Fractions
- Multiplying numerators and denominators straight across
- Doing a flip to divide fractions
- All Together Now: Adding Fractions
- Finding the sum of fractions with the same denominator
- Adding fractions with different denominators
- Taking It Away: Subtracting Fractions
- Subtracting fractions with the same denominator
- Subtracting fractions with different denominators
- Working Properly with Mixed Numbers
- Multiplying and dividing mixed numbers
- Adding and subtracting mixed numbers
- Chapter 11 Dallying with Decimals
- Understanding Basic Decimal Stuff
- Counting dollars and decimals
- Identifying the place value of decimals
- Knowing the decimal facts of life
- Performing the Big Four with Decimals
- Adding decimals
- Subtracting decimals
- Multiplying decimals
- Dividing decimals
- Converting between Decimals and Fractions
- Making simple conversions
- Changing decimals to fractions
- Changing fractions to decimals
- Chapter 12 Playing with Percents
- Making Sense of Percents
- Dealing with Percents Greater than 100%
- Converting to and from Percents, Decimals, and Fractions
- Going from percents to decimals
- Changing decimals into percents
- Switching from percents to fractions
- Turning fractions into percents
- Solving Percent Problems
- Figuring out simple percent problems
- Turning the problem around
- Deciphering more-difficult percent problems
- Putting All the Percent Problems Together
- Identifying the three types of percent problems
- Solving percent problems with equations
- Chapter 13 Word Problems with Fractions, Decimals, and Percents
- Adding and Subtracting Parts of the Whole in Word Problems
- Sharing a pizza: Fractions
- Buying by the pound: Decimals
- Splitting the vote: Percents
- Problems about Multiplying Fractions
- Renegade grocery shopping: Buying less than they tell you to
- Easy as pie: Working out what's left on your plate
- Multiplying Decimals and Percents in Word Problems
- To the end: Figuring out how much money is left
- Finding out how much you started with
- Handling Percent Increases and Decreases in Word Problems
- Raking in the dough: Finding salary increases
- Earning interest on top of interest
- Getting a deal: Calculating discounts
- Part 4 Picturing and Measuring - Graphs, Measures, Stats, and Sets
- Chapter 14 A Perfect Ten: Condensing Numbers with Scientific Notation
- First Things First: Using Powers of Ten as Exponents
- Counting zeros and writing exponents
- Adding exponents to multiply
- Working with Scientific Notation
- Writing in scientific notation
- Seeing why scientific notation works
- Understanding order of magnitude
- Multiplying with scientific notation
- Chapter 15 How Much Have You Got? Weights and Measures
- Examining Differences between the English and Metric Systems
- Looking at the English system
- Looking at the metric system
- Estimating and Converting between the English and Metric Systems
- Estimating in the metric system
- Converting units of measurement
- Chapter 16 Picture This: Basic Geometry
- Getting on the Plane: Points, Lines, Angles, and Shapes
- Making some points
- Knowing your lines
- Figuring the angles
- Shaping things up
- Closed Encounters: Shaping Up Your Understanding of 2-D Shapes
- Polygons
- Circles
- Taking a Trip to Another Dimension: Solid Geometry
- The many faces of polyhedrons
- 3-D shapes with curves
- Measuring Shapes: Perimeter, Area, Surface Area, and Volume
- 2-D: Measuring on the flat
- Spacing out: Measuring in three dimensions
- Chapter 17 Seeing Is Believing: Graphing as a Visual Tool
- Looking at Three Important Graph Styles
- Bar graph
- Pie chart
- Line graph
- Using the xy-Graph
- Plotting points on an xy-graph
- Drawing lines on an xy-graph
- Chapter 18 Solving Geometry and Measurement Word Problems
- The Chain Gang: Solving Measurement Problems with Conversion Chains
- Setting up a short chain
- Working with more links
- Pulling equations out of the text
- Rounding off: Going for the short answer
- Solving Geometry Word Problems
- Working from words and images
- Breaking out those sketching skills
- Chapter 19 Figuring Your Chances: Statistics and Probability
- Gathering Data Mathematically: Basic Statistics
- Understanding differences between qualitative and quantitative data
- Working with qualitative data
- Working with quantitative data
- Looking at Likelihoods: Basic Probability
- Figuring the probability
- Oh, the possibilities! Counting outcomes with multiple coins
- Chapter 20 Setting Things Up with Basic Set Theory
- Understanding Sets
- Elementary, my dear: Considering what's inside sets
- Sets of numbers
- Performing Operations on Sets
- Union: Combined elements
- Intersection: Elements in common
- Relative complement: Subtraction (sorta)
- Complement: Feeling left out
- Part 5 The X-Files: Introduction to Algebra
- Chapter 21 Enter Mr. X: Algebra and Algebraic Expressions
- Seeing How X Marks the Spot
- Expressing Yourself with Algebraic Expressions
- Evaluating algebraic expressions
- Coming to algebraic terms
- Making the commute: Rearranging your terms
- Identifying the coefficient and variable
- Identifying like terms
- Considering algebraic terms and the Big Four
- Simplifying Algebraic Expressions
- Combining like terms
- Removing parentheses from an algebraic expression
- Chapter 22 Unmasking Mr. X: Algebraic Equations
- Understanding Algebraic Equations
- Using x in equations
- Choosing among four ways to solve algebraic equations
- The Balancing Act: Solving for x
- Striking a balance
- Using the balance scale to isolate x
- Rearranging Equations and Isolating x
- Rearranging terms on one side of an equation
- Moving terms to the other side of the equals sign
- Removing parentheses from equations
- Cross-multiplying
- Chapter 23 Putting Mr. X to Work: Algebra Word Problems
- Solving Algebra Word Problems in Five Steps
- Declaring a variable
- Setting up the equation
- Solving the equation
- Answering the question
- Checking your work
- Choosing Your Variable Wisely
- Solving More-Complex Algebraic Problems
- Charting four people
- Crossing the finish line with five people
- Part 6 The Part of Tens
- Chapter 24 Ten Little Math Demons That Trip People Up
- Knowing the Multiplication Table
- Adding and Subtracting Negative Numbers
- Multiplying and Dividing Negative Numbers
- Knowing the Difference between Factors and Multiples
- Reducing Fractions to Lowest Terms
- Adding and Subtracting Fractions
- Multiplying and Dividing Fractions
- Identifying Algebra's Main Goal: Find x
- Knowing Algebra's Main Rule: Keep the Equation in Balance
- Seeing Algebra's Main Strategy: Isolate x
- Chapter 25 Ten Important Number Sets to Know
- Counting on Counting (or Natural) Numbers
- Identifying Integers
- Knowing the Rationale behind Rational Numbers
- Making Sense of Irrational Numbers
- Absorbing Algebraic Numbers
- Moving through Transcendental Numbers
- Getting Grounded in Real Numbers
- Trying to Imagine Imaginary Numbers
- Grasping the Complexity of Complex Numbers
- Going beyond the Infinite with Transfinite Numbers
- Index
- EULA
Chapter 1
Playing the Numbers Game
IN THIS CHAPTER
Finding out how numbers were invented
Looking at a few familiar number sequences
Examining the number line
Understanding four important sets of numbers
One useful characteristic about numbers is that they're conceptual, which means that, in an important sense, they're all in your head. (This fact probably won't get you out of having to know about them, though - nice try!)
For example, you can picture three of anything: three cats, three baseballs, three cannibals, three planets. But just try to picture the concept of three all by itself, and you find it's impossible. Oh, sure, you can picture the numeral 3, but the threeness itself - much like love or beauty or honor - is beyond direct understanding. But when you understand the concept of three (or four, or a million), you have access to an incredibly powerful system for understanding the world: mathematics.
In this chapter, I give you a brief history of how numbers came into being. I discuss a few common number sequences and show you how these connect with simple math operations like addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.
After that, I describe how some of these ideas come together with a simple yet powerful tool: the number line. I discuss how numbers are arranged on the number line, and I also show you how to use the number line as a calculator for simple arithmetic. Finally, I describe how the counting numbers (1, 2, 3, .) sparked the invention of more unusual types of numbers, such as negative numbers, fractions, and irrational numbers. I also show you how these sets of numbers are nested - that is, how one set of numbers fits inside another, which fits inside another.
Inventing Numbers
Historians believe that the first number systems came into being at the same time as agriculture and commerce. Before that, people in prehistoric, hunter-gatherer societies were pretty much content to identify bunches of things as "a lot" or "a little."
But as farming developed and trade between communities began, more precision was needed. So people began using stones, clay tokens, and similar objects to keep track of their goats, sheep, oil, grain, or whatever commodity they had. They exchanged these tokens for the objects they represented in a one-to-one exchange.
Eventually, traders realized that they could draw pictures instead of using tokens. Those pictures evolved into tally marks and, in time, into more complex systems. Whether they realized it or not, their attempts to keep track of commodities led these early humans to invent something entirely new: numbers.
Throughout the ages, the Babylonians, Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Mayans, Arabs, and Chinese (to name just a few) all developed their own systems of writing numbers.
Although Roman numerals gained wide currency as the Roman Empire expanded throughout Europe and parts of Asia and Africa, the more advanced system that the Arabs invented turned out to be more useful. Our own number system, the Hindu-Arabic numbers (also called decimal numbers), is closely derived from these early Arabic numbers.
Understanding Number Sequences
Although humans invented numbers for counting commodities, as I explain in the preceding section, they soon put them to use in a wide range of applications. Numbers were useful for measuring distances, counting money, amassing an army, levying taxes, building pyramids, and lots more.
But beyond their many uses for understanding the external world, numbers have an internal order all their own. So numbers are not only an invention, but equally a discovery: a landscape that seems to exist independently, with its own structure, mysteries, and even perils.
One path into this new and often strange world is the number sequence: an arrangement of numbers according to a rule. In the following sections, I introduce you to a variety of number sequences that are useful for making sense of numbers.
Evening the odds
One of the first facts you probably heard about numbers is that all of them are either even or odd. For example, you can split an even number of marbles evenly into two equal piles. But when you try to divide an odd number of marbles the same way, you always have one odd, leftover marble. Here are the first few even numbers:
2 ??4 ??6 ??8 ??10 ??12 ??14 ??16 .
You can easily keep the sequence of even numbers going as long as you like. Starting with the number 2, keep adding 2 to get the next number.
Similarly, here are the first few odd numbers:
1 3 ??5 ?7 ??9 ?11 13 15 .
The sequence of odd numbers is just as simple to generate. Starting with the number 1, keep adding 2 to get the next number.
Patterns of even or odd numbers are the simplest number patterns around, which is why kids often figure out the difference between even and odd numbers soon after learning to count.
Counting by threes, fours, fives, and so on
When you get used to the concept of counting by numbers greater than 1, you can run with it. For example, here's what counting by threes, fours, and fives looks like:
Threes:
3 ?? ???6 ?? ??9 ??12 ??15 ??18 ??21 ?24 .
Fours:
4 ?? ??8 ???12 ?? 16 ??20 ??24 ??28 ??32 .
Fives:
5 ??10 ??15 ??20 ??25 ??30 ??35 ??40 .
Counting by a given number is a good way to begin learning the multiplication table for that number, especially for the numbers you're kind of sketchy on. (In general, people seem to have the most trouble multiplying by 7, but 8 and 9 are also unpopular.) In Chapter 3, I show you a few tricks for memorizing the multiplication table once and for all.
These types of sequences are also useful for understanding factors and multiples, which you get a look at in Chapter 8.
Getting square with square numbers
When you study math, sooner or later you probably want to use visual aids to help you see what numbers are telling you. (Later in this book, I show you how one picture can be worth a thousand numbers when I discuss geometry in Chapter 16 and graphing in Chapter 17.)
The tastiest visual aids you'll ever find are those little square cheese-flavored crackers. (You probably have a box sitting somewhere in the pantry. If not, saltine crackers or any other square food works just as well.) Shake a bunch out of a box and place the little squares together to make bigger squares. Figure 1-1 shows the first few.
© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
FIGURE 1-1: Square numbers.
Voilà! The square numbers:
1 4 ??9 16 ??25 ??36 ??49 ?64 .
You get a square number by multiplying a number by itself, so knowing the square numbers is another handy way to remember part of the multiplication table. Although you probably remember without help that 2 × 2 = 4 you may be sketchy on some of the higher numbers, such as 7 × 7 = 49. Knowing the square numbers gives you another way to etch that multiplication table forever into your brain, as I show you in Chapter 3.
Square numbers are also a great first step on the way to understanding exponents, which I introduce later in this chapter and explain in more detail in Chapter 4.
Composing yourself with composite numbers
Some numbers can be placed in rectangular patterns. Mathematicians probably should call numbers like these "rectangular numbers," but instead they chose the term composite numbers. For example, 12 is a composite number because you can place 12 objects in rectangles of two different shapes, as in Figure 1-2.
© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
FIGURE 1-2: The number 12 laid out in two rectangular patterns.
As with square numbers, arranging numbers in visual patterns like this tells you something about how multiplication works. In this case, by counting the sides of both rectangles, you find out the following:
- 3 × 4 = 12
- 2 × 6 = 12
Similarly, other numbers such as 8 and 15 can also be arranged in rectangles, as in Figure 1-3.
© John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
FIGURE 1-3: Composite numbers,...
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