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Terminal digit filing is a filing system used to organize numerical records in numerical order. In this system, the last digit of each record is used as the filing criterion. To convert straight numerical to terminal digit filing, you must first identify the last digit in each numerical record. Then, you must organize the records in numerical order based on the last digit. For example, if the numerical records are 12, 21, 17, and 31, the last digits are 2, 1, 7, and 1, respectively. The records should be organized in numerical order based on the last digit to be 1, 1, 2, 7 (21, 31, 12, 17).
There are four consecutive 3-digit numbers with a sum of 2,494: 622, 623, 624 and 625.
89 x 90 = 8010 which are two consecutive two digit numbers that equal 8010.
Well, butter my biscuits! The two consecutive 4-digit numbers that add up to 9173 are 4586 and 4587. It's as simple as that, sugar!
There are only two prime numbers that are consecutive numbers, 2 and 3. Their product is 2 x 3 = 6. The first prime numbers are 2, 3, 5, and 7 and the only two consecutive prime numbers whose product is a single digit are 2 and 3. (The next two consecutive prime numbers, 3 and 5, have a two-digit product.)