By the time you advance to the point of dividing decimals, you don't use remainders any more.
With the divisor (the number you are dividing by) as 9, there are 9 possible remainders: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
the max remainder you can have when dividing by a number is that number minus 1 So 4 can only have 1, 2 and 3 as remainders. 9 can only have 1-8 and so on.
10.
Do it multiple times, and check it with a calculator multiple times also
By dividing it by the prime factors that have no remainders
There are 11 possible remainders (1 to 11). If something is divisible by 12, there is said to be no remainder, but this can be considered to be a remainder of 0, making 12 possible remainders.
1 & 2 are the only non-zero remainders you can get from dividing a whole number by 3.
Try dividing it with a calculator. If you get numbers after the decimal point, it is NOT divisible.Try dividing it with a calculator. If you get numbers after the decimal point, it is NOT divisible.Try dividing it with a calculator. If you get numbers after the decimal point, it is NOT divisible.Try dividing it with a calculator. If you get numbers after the decimal point, it is NOT divisible.
By the time you advance to the point of dividing decimals, you don't use remainders any more.
Yes, there are, if you're dividing by a number that's over 11.
All remainders on a calculator will appear as a decimal. Some TI scientific calculators can convert the answer into a fraction.
With the divisor (the number you are dividing by) as 9, there are 9 possible remainders: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8.
In division by three, possible nonzero remainders are 1 and 2.
Use a calculator!
the max remainder you can have when dividing by a number is that number minus 1 So 4 can only have 1, 2 and 3 as remainders. 9 can only have 1-8 and so on.
Any non-negative integer less than the number that you are dividing by.