You need at least two numbers to find something in common between them but the greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
There is really no such thing as a "greatest common multiple". Once you find the least common multiple of a set of numbers, you can keep adding the LCM to itself over and over again. Each new number you get will be a common multiple of your set of numbers, but each new number will always be larger than the previous. This means that you can keep adding while the number approaches infinity and you will still never find a greatest multiple.
It doesn't exist. There is no multiple so great that it can't be multiplied further. The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
There is really no such thing as a "greatest common multiple" (and certainly not "greatest common multiply"). Once you find the least common multiple of a set of numbers, you can keep adding the LCM to itself over and over again. Each new number you get will be a common multiple of your set of numbers, but each new number will always be larger than the previous. This means that you can keep adding while the number approaches infinity and you will still never find a greatest multiple.
There is really no such thing as a "greatest common multiple". Once you find the least common multiple of a set of numbers, you can keep adding the LCM to itself over and over again. Each new number you get will be a common multiple of your set of numbers, but each new number will always be larger than the previous. This means that you can keep adding while the number approaches infinity and you will still never find a greatest multiple.
The greatest common multiple of any two numbers is infinite.
They don't exist. The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
It is infinite but the lowest common multiple is 4500
You can't find the greatest common multiple in any amount of numbers, the number would be infinite.
The greatest common multiple of any two numbers is infinite.
The greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
There is no such thing as a "greatest common multiple" of a set of numbers. Once you find ANY common multiple (for example, by multiplying the two numbers), that common multiple times 2, or times 3, etc. will also be a common multiple.For many practical problems, you are usually required to find either:The least common multiple, or The greatest common factor.
No. Nobody can. There's no such thing as the 'greatest common multiple'. If somebody brings you a number and tells you that it's the greatest common multiple of 72 and 120, just bring it to me. I'll add 360 to it and get a common multiple that's even greater.
You need at least two numbers to find something in common between them but the greatest common multiple of any set of integers is infinite.
Relax. There is no such thing as the "greatest" one.
There is really no such thing as a "greatest common multiple". Once you find the least common multiple of a set of numbers, you can keep adding the LCM to itself over and over again. Each new number you get will be a common multiple of your set of numbers, but each new number will always be larger than the previous. This means that you can keep adding while the number approaches infinity and you will still never find a greatest multiple.