The order of prime factors is not relevant in factorisation.
Yes, a prime number, P, has only two factor pairs: (1, P) and (P, 1) so immediately after 1, they reverse order.
A prime number, P, has only two factor pairs: (1, P) and (P, 1).
A factor can or cannot be a prime number Ex: 2 is the factor of all other even numbers its a prime number but 9 is a factor of 18 and its not a prime number A prime is a factor but a factor being a prime number varies
what number is not a prime factor
That's a prime factor.
13 is a prime number. The only prime factor of a prime number is the number itself.
A composite factor is a factor that is a composite number, as opposed to a prime factor which is a factor that is a prime number.
A prime number has only one prime factor, and that prime factor is the number itself.
2 is a prime number because its only factors are one and itself. Since 2 is a prime number, if it is a factor of your number, it is a prime factor.
No, and you do not even if you reverse them.
No prime number only has one factor. Each prime number has itself and 1 as factors. Now, the number 1 of course has only one factor, but it is technically not a prime number.
prime factor = prime number which can be divided into the given number with no remainder ie 2