If I have two elements A and B, is the compound AB the same as BA?

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Compounds are named based on specific criteria established by IUPAC, which dictates that the positive ion or electron donor is listed first, as seen in NaCl and H2O. This systematic approach ensures that compound names are unique and unambiguous for effective communication in chemistry. However, the evolution of IUPAC rules means that older publications may use different names, leading to potential ambiguities. While the naming convention generally applies to elemental compounds, it is important to note that in polymers and anisotropic materials, the order of constituents can significantly affect properties and naming.
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Is there a specific reason for how compounds are named? Like NaCl for instance, what's the criteria to have NaCl rather than ClNa?
 
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There is a tendency to put the positive ion (or the element that acts as a donor of electrons) first so Na trumps Cl for first place - also why water is H2O and not, say, HOH. As you advance through chemistry you'll find there are lots of equivalent ways of writing out chemical names.
 
The only specific reason is that IUPAC defined naming rules so that when we talk about compounds we can name them in a way that is unique and unambiguous.

Not that all names assigned using IUPAC rules are unique and unambiguous, as the rules evolved with time, so some older publications can use different names than the current ones.
 
yes its the same thing lol. in general elements commute unlike operators in QM.

this works only for elements though. in polymers and in anisotropic materials order of the constituents matters.
 
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