The limit is infinity if the factors do not have to be whole numbers. If you stipulate that the factors have to be whole numbers, then, yes, for each number, there is a limit to how many factors it has. For example, the number 4 has only 3 whole-number factors: 1, 2, and 4.
It is. 1 is a factor of every whole number.
1.01 because its a whole number
Divide the factor into the number. If the answer is a whole number, the factor is a factor.
A factor that is a whole number. The whole number factors of 12 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 12.
which is greater, whole number with 5 digits or the whole number with 6 digits?
No.
No.
False
No.
No. Whatever multiple of the number you think might be the limit, you can always add the whole number again and have a larger multiple.
It is true.
A whole number greater than 1 whose only factors is itself and 1 is called a prime factor. 2, 3, 5, 7, and 11, are just a few of them.
No, 1 is a factor of every whole number because 1 is a factor of every whole number.
a whole factor is a number that is whole, which is also a factor, nd incase u didnt know a factor is the number u use to divide a number
A counting number is a whole number that is greater than zero.A positive integer is a whole number greater than zero.
When they have a factor in common greater than one.
It is. 1 is a factor of every whole number.