The rule comes about because of the place value system we use to write numbers in which each digit is worth ten times as much as when it is in the column to its right, for example:
Starting with the units column, each place value column is one more, one less, one more, one less, one more, etc than a multiple of 11, that is:
Units: 1 is 1 more than 0 = 0 x 11
Tens: 10 is 1 less than 11 = 1 x 11
Hundreds: 100 is 1 more than 99 = 9 x 11
Thousands: 1000 is 1 less than 1001 = 91 x 11
Ten Thousands: 10000 is 1 more than 9999 = 909 x 11
etc
So by alternately decreasing and increasing each place value column by its digit starting with the units column, it will produce a number which will definitely be a multiple of 11; however, to keep the value of the number the same, each digit will have to be added or subtracted from the number (depending upon whether the place value is decreased or increased):
Example: 12345
12345 = (1 x 10000) + (2 x 1000) + (3 x 100) + (4 x 10) + (5 x 1)
= (1 x 9999 + 1) + (2 x 1001 - 2) + (3 x 99 + 3) + (4 x 11 - 4) + (5 x 0 + 5)
= (1 x 9999 + 2 x 1001 + 3 x 99 + 4 x 11 + 5 x 0) + 1 - 2 + 3 - 4 + 5
= 11 x (1 x 909 + 2 x 91 + 3 x 9 + 4 x 1 + 5 x 0) + (1 - 2 + 3 - 4 + 5)
Thus the whole number can only be a multiple of 11 if the subtraction and addition of alternate digits (at the end above) is also a multiple of 11 (or zero), and hence the rule:
This rule can also be expressed as:
In the case of 12345, 1 - 2 + 3 - 4 + 5 = 5 - 4 + 3 - 2 + 1 = 3, so 12345 is not a multiple of 11 (and has a remainder of 3).
If the remainder is negative, 11 needs to be added to find the remainder.
Examples:
So 15342 is not a multiple of 11.
As -3 is negative, the remainder is -3 + 11 = 11 - 3 = 8.
(15342 = 11 x 1394 + 8)
So 231748 is a multiple of 11.
(231748 = 11 x 21068)
If the rules for 2 and 3 work, the number is divisibale by 5.
add all the digits together and see if it is divisible by nine.
2.50
There is no divisibility rule for 13 because it is a prime number. If you are thinking: why is there a divsibility rule for 2 and 3 then. Well, i don't know so go look it up on google.
Just carry out the division.
By tautology. If it did not work, it would not be a divisibility rule!
The divisibility rule for 22 is that the number is divisible by 2 and by 11. Divisibility by 2 requires that the number ends in 0, 2, 4, 6 or 8. Divisibility by 11 requires that the difference between the sum of the the digits in odd positions and the sum of all the digits in even positions is 0 or divisible by 11.
The number must be divisible by 13 and by 11.
if the difference of the sum at the alternate places is divisible by 11 then it is divisible by 11
If the rules for 2 and 3 work, the number is divisibale by 5.
What is the divisblity rule by 8
There is no easy rule for divisibility by 34.
add all the digits together and see if it is divisible by nine.
The divisibility rule for 2 works because the base of our number system, 10, is divisible by 2.
Able to Be Divided
2.50
Judging by some of the questions asked on this site, the first rule is that divisibility is a concept that applies only to whole numbers.