That is correct. The other number is the LCM.
The 2nd factor is a square of the first one.
When the first number can divide the second without remainder. The formal definition would be as follows: For integers x and y, x is a factor of y if there exists an integer n such that y = n*x
IF they are integers, then the first number is a multiple of the second and the second is a factor of the first.
If a number can be divided with small numbers or numbers equal to it than those numbers are known as factors, for example we have number "25" the the factors of this number would be 1,3,5 and 25 because 25 can be divided with all of the above mentioned numbers. Hence every number [rather than 1] has at least two factors. the first factor is the "1" and the secondly all the numbers are the factor of their self.
-- List all factors of the first number. -- List all factors of the second number. -- If there are more than two numbers, list all factors of each one. -- Find the set of factors that are on every list. -- Find the greatest factor in the set.
If the second number is a multiple of the first, then the first numberis the greatest common factor of both numbers.
The second number is a factor of the first.
You choose any number for the first factor. Then you divide 18 by that first factor to get the second factor.
The first number is divisible by the second number
The first number is a multiple of the second.
The 2nd factor is a square of the first one.
The first is a multiple of the second. The second is a factor of the first.
This is a question that cannot be answered. First, 64 is not a prime number. Second, the greatest common factor is the factor that two or more numbers have in common. There is no greatest common factor of a single number, such as 64.
divisible
When the first number is a factor of the other, the first number is the GCF.
= The sum of two numbers is -42 the first number minus the second number is 52 Find the numbers? =
The first number is a multiple of the second. The second number is a factor of the first.