0.5
n/4=2
its 8
Yes, you can. An even number can be divided by 2 evenly. An odd number will have a remainder of 1 when divided by 2.
An even number is an integer that can be divided by 2 without remainder.
It is an integer which, when divided by 2, leaves a remainder of 1.
Zero is even. An integer is even if, when divided by 2, it leaves no remainder. 0/2 = 0, with no remainder.
An even number can be divided by 2 evenly. An odd number will have a remainder of 1 when divided by 2. Even plus odd is odd.
12
The integer is 157. 157/3 = 52 remainder 1 157/5 = 31 remainder 2 157/7 = 22 remainder 3
0, 1, 2, or 3.
6172839
The remainder is 0.If A has a remainder of 1 when divided by 3, then A = 3m + 1 for some integer mIf B has a remainder of 2 when divided by 3, then B = 3n + 1 for some integer n→ A + B = (3m + 1) + (3n + 2)= 3m + 3n + 1 + 2= 3m + 3n + 3= 3(m + n + 1)= 3k where k = m + n + 1 and is an integer→ A + B = 3k + 0→ remainder when A + B divided by 3 is 0-------------------------------------------------------------------------From this, you may be able to see that:if A when divided by C has remainder Ra; andif B when divided by C has remainder Rb; then(A + B) divided by C will have remainder equal to the remainder of (Ra + Rb) divided by C
It leaves a remainder of 1 when divided by 2. Or, if the number is n, then n-1 or n+1 is even (divisible by 2).
No number can satisfy these conditions: To have a remainder of 1 when divided by 6, the number must be odd (as all multiples of 6 are even and an even number plus 1 is odd) To have a remainder of 2 when divided by 8, the number must be even (as all multiples of 8 are even and an even number plus 2 is even) No number is both odd and even. → No number exists that has a remainder of 1 when divided by 6, and 2 when divided by 8.