Search the Internet for a list of prime numbers - the Wikipedia article on prime numbers might list a few. All numbers between 2-100 that are not prime, are composite. (The number is not counted as prime, nor as composite.)
Look for a table of prime numbers. All the odd numbers that are NOT on this list are composite numbers.
A single number cannot be relatively prime. Any pair of numbers between 50 and 100 of which one is a prime will be relatively prime. There are 728 pairs of numbers that are relatively prime and I have neither the time nor patience to list them all!
There are infinitely many prime numbers, so it is impossible to list them all. The first few after 100 are 101, 103, 107, 109, 113, ...
It is impossible to list all the prime numbers as there are an infinite number of them. The list of prime numbers starts: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... Suppose you could list all the prime numbers and have done so - there is no prime number which is not on the list. Multiply them all together and add 1. This number is not divisible by any of the listed prime numbers as there is always a remainder of 1. So either this new number is a prime number, or there is another prime number not listed which will divide into it. Which means that the list was not all the prime numbers; meaning it is impossible to list all the prime numbers.
That's an infinite list.
That's an infinite list.
That's an infinite list.
Search the Internet for a list of prime numbers - the Wikipedia article on prime numbers might list a few. All numbers between 2-100 that are not prime, are composite. (The number is not counted as prime, nor as composite.)
Look for a table of prime numbers. All the odd numbers that are NOT on this list are composite numbers.
less than 100
A single number cannot be relatively prime. Any pair of numbers between 50 and 100 of which one is a prime will be relatively prime. There are 728 pairs of numbers that are relatively prime and I have neither the time nor patience to list them all!
There are infinitely many prime numbers, so it is impossible to list them all. The first few after 100 are 101, 103, 107, 109, 113, ...
It is impossible to list all the prime numbers as there are an infinite number of them. The list of prime numbers starts: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, ... Suppose you could list all the prime numbers and have done so - there is no prime number which is not on the list. Multiply them all together and add 1. This number is not divisible by any of the listed prime numbers as there is always a remainder of 1. So either this new number is a prime number, or there is another prime number not listed which will divide into it. Which means that the list was not all the prime numbers; meaning it is impossible to list all the prime numbers.
It is impossible to list the infinite number of prime numbers and composite numbers.
list the prime numbers between one and twenty
The prime factors of 100 are: 2,5