The set of proper factors does not include 1 and the number itself.
They ARE the same.
The set of proper factors doesn't include 1 and the number itself.
Proper factors don't include one and the number itself.
The set of factors includes one and the number itself. Proper factors do not include those two.
The proper factors of a number do not include one and the number itself.
Depending on your definition of proper factors, the set of proper factor factors either doesn't include 1 and/or the number itself for a given number.
Proper factors of a number do not include 1 or the number itself. For example, all of the factors of 6 are 1, 2, 3, and 6, but the proper factors of 6 are 2 and 3.
No. You will always wind up with the same set.
Each number has a certain amount of factors. Other numbers may have the same amount of factors, but not the same exact factors. Since numbers don't stop, thee amount of factors doesn't stop either, but each number has a distinct set.
All numbers have factors. Some factors are prime numbers. These are known as prime factors. The set of prime factors is a subset of the set of factors for any given number.
That is one definition of the set of proper factors.
If the other numbers are all factors of the greatest number, then that number will be the LCM. Example: 2, 4 & 8: both 2 and 4 are factors of 8, so 8 is the LCM. 2, 3 and 12: same thing, both 2 & 3 are factors of 12.