An operation is like a recipe that tells you exactly how to change something into another thing.
Imagine you have a toy box full of blocks. Each block has a number on it, maybe a red one with "2" and a blue one with "3." An operation is like saying, "Let's put them together!" So the red 2 and blue 3 become a new block with "5" on it. That’s addition, one kind of operation.
How Operations Work
Think of an operation as a special machine in your kitchen. You put something in, like two apples, and the machine does its job, maybe it adds them together or divides them into halves. What comes out is the result.
You use operations all the time without even noticing! When you count how many candies you have after getting more from your friend, that’s an operation too, probably addition again!
Operations are like the rules of a game: they tell you what to do with numbers or objects to get a new answer. And just like every game has its own rules, different operations work in their own special ways.
Examples
- A baker mixing ingredients to make bread
- A robot arm assembling a car part
- A student solving a math problem
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See also
- How Does Every EXECUTION Explained in 14 Minutes Work?
- How Does Transition | Meaning of transition Work?
- What is Execution?
- What is reconstruction?
- What is Implementation?