is called a factor.
A rational number is always the result of dividing an integer when the divisor is nonzero.
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Division by an integer is always defined only when the divisor is not zero
In mathematics, a divisor of an integer n, also called a factor of n, is an integer less than n which evenly divides n without leaving a remainder
an exact divisor of a number is one that leaves no remainder (a remainder of zero)--example: 27 divided by 3 is 9 but 27 divided bt 4 is 6 remainder 3 so 4 is not an exact divisor of 27 but 3 is
18 and all the multiples of 18.
You may get a real answer, or not (if the divisor is 0).
A factor or divisor.
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.
The remainder of two positive integers can be calculated by first dividing one number (the dividend) by the other (the divisor) using integer division (ignoring any fractional component). Multiply this quotient by the divisor, then subtract the product from the dividend. The result is the remainder. Alternatively, while the dividend remains greater than the divisor, subtract the divisor from the dividend and repeat until the dividend is smaller than the divisor. The dividend is then the remainder.
The greatest integer remainder for a division sum with a divisor of 63 would be 62 - for a number one fewer than an integer multiple of 63 - for example, 125/63 = 1 remainder 62.
8 integer remainders. From 0 to 7 (inclusive).