If a number is divisible by another, that means that if you do an integer division (a division with a remainder), the remainder will be zero.
Alternately, and since calculators often don't have an option for integer division, the division should produce an integer; i.e., no decimal.
E.g., 10 / 5 (in a calculator) is equal to 2 - therefore, 10 is divisible by 5.
5 / 2 = 2.5, because of the decimal, you know that 5 is not divisible by 2.
If a number is divisible by another, that means that if you do an integer division (a division with a remainder), the remainder will be zero.
Alternately, and since calculators often don't have an option for integer division, the division should produce an integer; i.e., no decimal.
E.g., 10 / 5 (in a calculator) is equal to 2 - therefore, 10 is divisible by 5.
5 / 2 = 2.5, because of the decimal, you know that 5 is not divisible by 2.
If a number is divisible by another, that means that if you do an integer division (a division with a remainder), the remainder will be zero.
Alternately, and since calculators often don't have an option for integer division, the division should produce an integer; i.e., no decimal.
E.g., 10 / 5 (in a calculator) is equal to 2 - therefore, 10 is divisible by 5.
5 / 2 = 2.5, because of the decimal, you know that 5 is not divisible by 2.
If a number is divisible by another, that means that if you do an integer division (a division with a remainder), the remainder will be zero.
Alternately, and since calculators often don't have an option for integer division, the division should produce an integer; i.e., no decimal.
E.g., 10 / 5 (in a calculator) is equal to 2 - therefore, 10 is divisible by 5.
5 / 2 = 2.5, because of the decimal, you know that 5 is not divisible by 2.
If a number is divisible by another, that means that if you do an integer division (a division with a remainder), the remainder will be zero.
Alternately, and since calculators often don't have an option for integer division, the division should produce an integer; i.e., no decimal.
E.g., 10 / 5 (in a calculator) is equal to 2 - therefore, 10 is divisible by 5.
5 / 2 = 2.5, because of the decimal, you know that 5 is not divisible by 2.
... when the remainder after division ...
A number is divisible by another when the remainder after division by that number is zero.
No its not
A multiple.
no of course not only if u dont divide actually by 0 if u did and you get a negative it becomes a integer
yes, this just says that there is a 0 remainder. For example, 6 is divisible by 3 since the remainder is 0
... when the remainder after division ...
A number is divisible by another when the remainder after division by that number is zero.
No its not
A multiple.
Its the remainder
that's correct
no of course not only if u dont divide actually by 0 if u did and you get a negative it becomes a integer
No. An easy way to tell if a number is divisable by 5 is if the last digit in the number ends with '5' or '0'.
If a set is closed under an operation. then the answer will be a part of that set. If you add, subtract or multiply any two rational numbers you get another national number. But when it comes to division, it is closed except for one number and that is ZERO. eg 3.56 (rational number) ÷ 0 = no answer. Since no answer is not a rational number, that rational numbers are not closed under the operation of division.
76 is divisable by 2, but not 5. How come? 2 x 38 = 76 76/2 = 38. Meaning, if you add 2+2+2+...+2 38 times, you will get 76. Contrarily, you can't take a whole number, multiply it by 5 and get 76 because all multiples of five end with a 0 or 5. Any number is divisable by 2 when it is an even number. Any number is divisable by 5 when it is a number ending with 0 or 5.
Yes - any number ending in any multiple to 2 (2, 4, 6, 8, and 0 - the number in front of the 0 doesn't matter) is divisable by it.