It doesn't always. It's true only if the 4-digit numbers are mirror images of each other.
There is no 1-digit number that is equal to 14 and 28.
No, a multiple of 6 cannot have a ones digit equal to 3. The ones digit of a multiple of 6 will always be even, either 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8, because 6 is divisible by 2.
The factors of 35 are 1, 5, 7, 35. All of them are odd. 7 and 35 are multiples of 7. 5 has a digit sum equal to 5. No number satisfies all of the conditions.
No. Four can not be multiplied by another whole number and equal ten.
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There is no 1-digit number that is equal to 14 and 28.
Yes. 12 * 9 = 108. 108 is a number made up from 3 digits.
No, a multiple of 6 cannot have a ones digit equal to 3. The ones digit of a multiple of 6 will always be even, either 0, 2, 4, 6, or 8, because 6 is divisible by 2.
When a number is a multiple of 5, the possible values for the ones digit are zero and five.
The factors of 35 are 1, 5, 7, 35. All of them are odd. 7 and 35 are multiples of 7. 5 has a digit sum equal to 5. No number satisfies all of the conditions.
No. Four can not be multiplied by another whole number and equal ten.
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198 is the greatest three-digit even number that has no factor equal to 4.
To find the three-digit numbers that are multiples of 16, we first identify the smallest and largest three-digit multiples of 16. The smallest three-digit number is 100, and the smallest multiple of 16 greater than or equal to 100 is 112 (16 x 7). The largest three-digit number is 999, and the largest multiple of 16 less than or equal to 999 is 992 (16 x 62). To find the total number of three-digit multiples of 16, we calculate the range from 7 to 62, which gives us 62 - 7 + 1 = 56 three-digit multiples of 16.
As an 8 digit binary number it is equal to 166.
89