1
One is.
1 has one factor 1
The number ' 1 ' has only one factor.
By definition, all prime numbers have exactly two factors. There is not a prime number that has only one factor.
A factor is a number or algebraic expression by which another is exactly divisible. A positive factor is a factor that is a positive number as opposed to a negative one.
The number 1 is not a prime number. A prime number has exactly two factors, 1 and the number itself. 1 is the only number having exactly one factor.
A factor is a number or algebraic expression by which another is exactly divisible. A prime number is a positive integer with two factors: one and the number itself.
The first number is a multiple of the second. The second number is a factor of the first.
I think you already did. Prime numbers have exactly two factors. 1 is not a prime number because it has only one factor.
A prime is a number with exactly two factors, itself and one. Note that 1 is neither prime nor composite, as it has exactly one factor, and that there is only one even prime, 2.
Any prime number except 1, which only has one factor (since 1 and the number itself are the same).
A factor of a integer is an integer that divides the second integer into a third integer exactly; i.e. A is a factor of B if B/A is exactly C, where all of A, B and C are integers. A prime factor is a factor as above, but is also a prime number. This means that the only factors of that factor are one and the number itself; i.e. A is a prime factor of B if B/A is exactly C andthe only factors of A are 1 and A.