2 and 6
3 and 23 are two prime numbers having a sum of 26.
Let the two numbers be P and Q. So P+Q = 34. P-Q = 18. Add these two equations together:2P = 52. --> P = 26. Substitute into one of the original equations: P+Q=34 --> Q=34-26=8. The numbers are 26 and 8. Check to make sure: 26+8=34. 26-8=18
Impossible, as there are not enough numbers to cover all squares.
I suggest -26! = -2720 = - 5.52*10216
LCM for the numbers 26 and 39 is 78.
3 and 23 are two prime numbers having a sum of 26.
13X2
You could make 10*10*10*26*26*26 combinations, or 17576000 combinations.
Let the two numbers be P and Q. So P+Q = 34. P-Q = 18. Add these two equations together:2P = 52. --> P = 26. Substitute into one of the original equations: P+Q=34 --> Q=34-26=8. The numbers are 26 and 8. Check to make sure: 26+8=34. 26-8=18
Impossible, as there are not enough numbers to cover all squares.
23,3 19,7 13,13
I suggest -26! = -2720 = - 5.52*10216
2*26 as well as many others
LCM for the numbers 26 and 39 is 78.
-89
Two pairs of numbers with a GCF of 26 are 26 & 52 or 52 & 78
You can make 26 using the numbers 2, 6, and 7 by performing the operation: ( 6 \times 7 - 2 = 42 - 2 = 40 ). Then, you can further simplify this to ( 6 \times 7 - 6 \times 2 = 42 - 12 = 30 ). However, that doesn't yield 26 directly. Instead, you could use the combination ( 6 \times 7 - 6 ) which equals 36, then subtract 10 to get 26, but that requires additional numbers. A direct method using only those three numbers is not straightforward without additional operations or numbers.