It need not be.
1/2 + 1/4 = 3/4
1/2 * 1/4 = 1/8
The product of 4 and 3 is (4 \times 3 = 12). The sum of 4 and 3 is (4 + 3 = 7). To find how much greater the product is than the sum, we subtract the sum from the product: (12 - 7 = 5). Therefore, the product is 5 greater than the sum.
To get the product, multiply the first number by the second. To get the sum, add the second number to the first. To get the difference, subtract the smaller number from the larger.
27 and 29 I did this in my head by applying certain rules: the two numbers had to end in 7 and 9 it's the only way I could think other 1 and 3 to get a 3 at the end of the product they both had to be bigger than 20 and smaller than 30 smaller than twenty and the product is less than 400, bigger than 30 and the product is bigger than 900 After applying these two rules, the only possible answer was 27 and 29
The two numbers are 6 and 13 so therefore the smaller number is 6
A counterexample to the conjecture that the sum of any two integers greater than 1 is less than their product is the pair (2, 2). The sum of these integers is 2 + 2 = 4, while their product is 2 × 2 = 4. Here, the sum equals the product, demonstrating that the conjecture does not hold for all integers greater than 1.
29.
The product of 4 and 3 is (4 \times 3 = 12). The sum of 4 and 3 is (4 + 3 = 7). To find how much greater the product is than the sum, we subtract the sum from the product: (12 - 7 = 5). Therefore, the product is 5 greater than the sum.
To get the product, multiply the first number by the second. To get the sum, add the second number to the first. To get the difference, subtract the smaller number from the larger.
3 and 5
27 and 29 I did this in my head by applying certain rules: the two numbers had to end in 7 and 9 it's the only way I could think other 1 and 3 to get a 3 at the end of the product they both had to be bigger than 20 and smaller than 30 smaller than twenty and the product is less than 400, bigger than 30 and the product is bigger than 900 After applying these two rules, the only possible answer was 27 and 29
The two numbers are 6 and 13 so therefore the smaller number is 6
The product is 30.
If the smaller number is x, the larger is 1625/x where x<= 1625 So the sum is x + 1625/x for 0< x <= sqrt(1625)
It depends on the product of sum of what.
For a pair of integers (a) and (b), if their sum (a + b) is smaller than one of the integers (let's say (a)), it implies that (b) must be negative. Specifically, if (a + b < a), then (b) must be less than 0. For example, if (a = 5) and (b = -3), their sum (5 - 3 = 2), which is smaller than (5) but greater than (-3).
The LCM of 7 and 9 is their product. There is no common multiple that is smaller.
20 and 46