so you cant get another group
Because if the remainder is greater, then you could "fit" another divisor value into it. if they are equal, then you can divide it easily. Thus, the remainder is always lower than the divisor.
It SHOULD always be less than the divisor... Otherwise your answer is wrong.
because the divisor wont work when you multiply it??
No it shouldn't because the divisor should always be bigger.
24. It is always one less than the divisor.
Because if the remainder is greater, then you could "fit" another divisor value into it. if they are equal, then you can divide it easily. Thus, the remainder is always lower than the divisor.
If you divide correctly, the remainder will always be less than the divisor.
28. It is always one less than the divisor.
The remainder is less than the divisor because if the remainder was greater than the divisor, you have the wrong quotient. In other words, you should increase your quotient until your remainder is less than your divisor!
To perform division with a remainder, divide the dividend (the number being divided) by the divisor (the number you are dividing by) to find the quotient (the whole number result). Multiply the quotient by the divisor, and then subtract this product from the original dividend to find the remainder. The final result can be expressed as: Dividend = (Divisor × Quotient) + Remainder. The remainder must always be less than the divisor.
A remainder can be any non-negative number that is less than the divisor. If the remainder is bigger than the divisor, the divisor can go into it another one (or more) times until the remainder is brought into that range.
Nothing. The remainder has to be less than the divisor.