The greatest common factor, or GCF, is the largest positive integer that will divide evenly with no remainder into all the members of a given set of numbers.
Since numbers don't stop, GCFs don't either. To Infinity and beyond!
2 and 4 are factors of 8. GCFs happen when you compare two or more numbers.
GCFs refer to integers. The GCF of 4, 18 and 24 is 2.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF and there can only be one GCF per set of numbers. Other than that...
The GCFs are 12, 6, 14, 24, 13 and 4 respectively.
It is: 15
The GCF is 9.
5 and 10
The GCF is 6.
One per set of numbers.
Since numbers don't stop, GCFs don't either. To Infinity and beyond!
The GCFs are 2, 1, 3, 1 and 1
That's backwards. The GCF of 160 and 20 is 20.
2 and 4 are factors of 8. GCFs happen when you compare two or more numbers.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF. If that's 55 and 9, or 5 and 59, their GCFs are both 1.
They aren't. 5 is the GCF of 35 and 75. It is the largest number that divides into both 35 and 75 evenly.
I'll exchange them for the numbers you want to know the GCF of.