n mathematics, a divisor of an integer n, also called a factor of n, is an integer which divides n without leaving a remainder. That is to say factors and divisors are the exact same thing.
They are two different words for the same thing.
Yes.
Divisors:
1,2,5,10,25,50
yes they are because are used for the same thing as most things
No they do not, take a big prime number and compare it to a smaller composite number. The number 6833 as only two factors (divisors), namely 1 and itself. But the number 68 which is much smaller has more factors or divisors. 68 has 2 and 4 and 17 and 1 and itself which is already more divisors than 6833.
A perfect number is the term for a number that is equal to the sum of its proper divisors. Be careful not to confuse that with proper factors. Proper divisors include 1 but not the number itself. Proper factors don't include either I or the original number.
They are called factors or divisors.
22 has four divisors (also called factors): 1, 2, 11, 22.
Factors are numbers that produce a product when multiplied together. A divisor is a number that produces a product when multiplied by a quotient, which is also a factor. When you're dividing, you call them divisors and when you're multiplying you call them factors, but they're just different words for the same thing.
47 is prime. Its only factors are 1 and itself.