Any integer greater than one can be co-prime.
Any number greater than one can be co-prime.
Any number greater than one can be co-prime.
2 ,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,.....to n time
Any integer greater than one can be co-prime.
Any integer greater than one can be co-prime.
Any number greater than 1 can be co-prime.
Any number greater than 1 can be co-prime.
All numbers greater than one in that range can be co-prime. 4 and 9 are co-prime.
It's an enormous list; we wouldn't be able to get them all. All of the prime numbers in that range are co-prime with each other. The composite numbers, as long as they aren't multiples of the primes, are co-prime with the primes. The square numbers are co-prime with each other and quite a few of the composite numbers are co-prime with each other. If you could narrow the range, we could be more specific.
Not really. It's just in how they are used. Factors are numbers, whether they're co-prime or not.
if any two numbers having one as its common factor are called co-primes. ex:- (1,31) (3,31)(14,15)
Well, darling, the co-prime numbers between 15 and 30 are 1 and 7. Co-prime means they only have 1 as their common factor, so anything else is just extra baggage. So, in this case, 1 and 7 are the lucky winners of the co-prime club between 15 and 30.