It depends which side you are doing the multiplication on? Most linear algebra textbooks work matrix-vector, where the vector is a column vector. In that arrangement, the resulting vector is formed by dot products of the rows of the matrix with the vector.
On the other hand, you see vector-matrix multiplication a lot in other places, for example, the Markov chain literature. There, the vector is a row vector and the resulting vector is formed by dot products of the columns of the matrix with the original vector.
On the other hand, you see vector-matrix multiplication a lot in other places, for example, the Markov chain literature. There, the vector is a row vector and the resulting vector is formed by dot products of the columns of the matrix with the original vector.