The factors of 3 are 1 and 3. Put three blocks in one row.
1 x 24 2 x 12 3 x 8 4 x 6
2,2,2,2,2,3,3, and 3 are the prime factors the product is show like this... 2x2x2x2x2x3x3x3=864 or 25 x 33 = 864
The Prime Factors are 3 x 11 x 31.
They are: 2*2*3*3*7 = 252
1) Don't talk or make any sound. 2) Don't be Black or White - be both. 3) Follow the 3 factors of miming.
1 x 24 2 x 12 3 x 8 4 x 6
1 x 24 2 x 12 3 x 8 4 x 6
Oh, dude, there are like a bazillion different arrays you can make with 18. Okay, maybe not a bazillion, but definitely a lot. You can have arrays like [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], [18], [9, 9], or even [2, 9, 7]. The possibilities are endless... well, not really, but you get the point.
1, 3, 5 and 15
4 (or eight if you count transposed arrays as being different).
The Number of factors, (That is the number of pairs, such as 2= 1x2, 2x1), is equal to the number of rectangular arrays which can be made for each composite number. As such, the number of factors in the number 9 is 3, (1,3,9), and the number of rectangular arrays is also three (1x9, 9x1,3x3). Hope this helps!
The factors of 27 are 1, 3, 9 and 27. You could use 1 row of 27 blocks or 3 rows of 9 blocks.
To arrange arrays with the number 18, you can consider various combinations of factors that multiply to 18. The factors of 18 are 1, 2, 3, 6, 9, and 18, allowing for arrangements such as (1, 18), (2, 9), (3, 6), and their permutations. Additionally, you can create multi-dimensional arrays, such as 2x9 or 3x6, which represent different structures for organizing the number. Overall, the arrangements depend on how you choose to group and order the factors of 18.
No.
Some of them are: 1. char, short, int, long, float, double 2. pointers to these 3. arrays of these 4. arrays of pointers 5. pointers to arrays ...
Well, honey, let me break it down for you. To form a rectangular array, you need to find pairs of factors of 24. So, 1 x 24, 2 x 12, 3 x 8, and 4 x 6. That's a total of 4 rectangular arrays you can make with 24 tiles. Math can be sassy too, you know!
Sir, your question is not clear. If you just want to multiply 3 and 24 then why are you trying to use arrays for such simple calculation.