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when is the greatest common factor of two #'s one of the two #'s?Explain your resoning.

2007-09-27 13:14:58 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

5 answers

When one of the numbers is a multiple of the other, for example 33 and 66.

The reason is that all the prime factors of the first number must be included in the second number. Any additional prime factors in the second number will just make it a multiple of the first.

If the first number has factors of:
a * b * c * d

Then the second number has factors of:
a * b * c * d * n

The greatest common factor of both numbers is:
a * b * c * d
which is just the first number.

So one number must just be a multiple of the other.

2007-09-27 13:17:48 · answer #1 · answered by Puzzling 7 · 1 0

When one of the numbers goes into the other one evenly. An example is 2 and 4... 4 is the GCF because 2 goes into 4 evenly and 4 goes into 4, so 4 is the GCF

I hope this helps =)

2007-09-27 13:19:38 · answer #2 · answered by Loves 2 Sing. 3 · 0 0

it's pretty obvious that one number has to be a multiple of the other one. you can't get a bigger common factor than the modulus of the smallest of the two numbers, and this occurs if the first one is a multiple of the latter.

2007-09-27 13:21:21 · answer #3 · answered by Dan 1 · 0 0

When one number is a factor of the other.
This is because the lower number cannot have any factors greater than what it is.

2007-09-27 13:23:37 · answer #4 · answered by onceuponanairplane 2 · 0 0

When the number is prime because it's only factors are itself is one.

2007-09-27 13:18:27 · answer #5 · answered by shopacholic2000 2 · 0 0

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