Vector Subtraction: Is it Commutative?

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Vector subtraction is not commutative, but it can be expressed in a way that utilizes the commutative property of vector addition. The equation \vec{am}=\vec{c}-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a} can be rewritten as \vec{am}=-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}+\vec{c}, demonstrating that both forms are equivalent. This transformation relies on the principle that subtracting a vector is the same as adding its negative. Thus, while subtraction itself isn't commutative, the expressions can be rearranged through addition. Understanding this relationship clarifies vector operations in mathematical contexts.
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Homework Statement



Just a quick question. In the attached image, I can say \vec{am}=\vec{c}-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}. Although subtraction is not commutative, can I also say (relative strictly to vectors) that \vec{am}=-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}+\vec{c}, considering \vec{am}=\frac{1}{2}\vec{ao}+\vec{c}?

Many thanks.
 

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odolwa99 said:

Homework Statement



Just a quick question. In the attached image, I can say \vec{am}=\vec{c}-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}. Although subtraction is not commutative, can I also say (relative strictly to vectors) that \vec{am}=-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}+\vec{c}, considering \vec{am}=\frac{1}{2}\vec{ao}+\vec{c}?

Many thanks.
Subtraction isn't commutative, as you noted, but addition is, and that's really what you're doing. a - b = a + (-b), which is the same as -b + a.
 
odolwa99 said:

Homework Statement



Just a quick question. In the attached image, I can say \vec{am}=\vec{c}-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}. Although subtraction is not commutative, can I also say (relative strictly to vectors) that \vec{am}=-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}+\vec{c}, considering \vec{am}=\frac{1}{2}\vec{ao}+\vec{c}?

Many thanks.

Saying that \ \vec{am}=\vec{c}-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}\ is essentially the same as saying \ \vec{am}=-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}+\vec{c}\,,\ because \ \vec{c}-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}=\vec{c}+ \left(-\frac{1}{2}\vec{a}\right)\ and vector addition is commutative.
 
Great. Thank you very much.
 
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