If you're asking us to list the factor pairs of all the integers from 1 to 100, the answer is no. The time it would take to do that takes time away from other questions. If we list all of them here, no one else would be able to find them. The purpose of this website is to provide you with one or two examples that will help you to understand problems better. Although it's unlikely this was a homework question, the factor pair of 1 is (1,1). The factor pairs of 100 are (100,1)(50,2)(25,4)(20,5)(10,10). Now that you understand the principle, the rest should be easy to find.
The factor pairs of 51 are (1,51) and (17,3)
The difference is between factor pairs and distinct factors. With square numbers, one of the factor pairs will be the same number twice. When listing the distinct factors, that number is only listed once.
The factor pairs of 98 are (1,98), (2,49), and (7,14).
One pair: it's a prime number.
No. Factor pairs can be combined to create multiples.
Yes. Factor pairs are always repeated across pairs since factor pairs are certain kinds of pairs.
the factor pairs are 1x35 & 5x7
The factor pairs of 28 are :28,114,27,4
Sixteen factor pairs.
Factor pairs refer to integers, not decimals.
The factor pairs of 57 are 3x19 and 1x57
The factor pairs of 27 are 1x27 and 3x9.
Mathematicians call them "factor pairs."
its a factor with two pairs of the same number
There are 10 factor pairs for 5,000:5000,12500,21250,41000,5625,8500,10250,20200,25125,40100,50
The factor pairs of 343 are (343,1) and (49,7)
The factor pairs of 91 are (1,91) and (7,13).