answersLogoWhite

0

What is seven less than n?

Updated: 9/16/2023
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

Best Answer

n - 7?

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What is seven less than n?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Basic Math

How do you write a number less than a number?

n-n


How many integers n greater than and less than 100 are there such that if the digits of n are reversed the resulting integer is n plus 9?

I'm assuming the question should read n greater than 10 and less than 100 and there are 8 numbers that satisfy this,1223344556677889So the answer is dhttp://www.webanswers.com/share-question.cfm?q=how-many-integers-n-greater-than-and-less-than-100-are-there-such-that-if-the-digits-of-n-are-the-is-1379ff| http://www.webanswers.com/answer/1566078/education/how-many-integers-n-greater-than-and-less-than-100-are-there-such-that-if-the-digits-of-n-are-the-is-1379ff| http://www.webanswers.com/report-abuse.cfm?q=how-many-integers-n-greater-than-and-less-than-100-are-there-such-that-if-the-digits-of-n-are-the-is-1379ff&p=1566078


Does a base have a pH of greater or less than 7?

no acids are higher than seven and bases are lower than seven


Ratio of square numbers to numbers with 4 factors?

As N approaches infinity the ratio of squares less than N to numbers with 4 factors less than N approaches 0. This means that in the customary way of defining it, the ratio you're interested in is 0 (although that should be taken with a grain of salt - it certainly doesn't mean that there are 0 square numbers). The number of squares less than N is approximately √N. Rather than calculating the ratio we're interested in, we're going to calculate a calculate a ratio guaranteed to be greater: the ratio of squares to numbers that are twice a prime number (which are some, but not all, of the numbers with 4 factors). There are approximately N/ln N prime numbers less than N, by the prime number theorem. So there are N/(2 ln N/2) prime numbers less than N/2, which can be doubled to get a number less than N that's twice a prime number. The ratio is therefore √N(2 ln N/2)/N, which is O(ln N/√N). √N grows much faster than ln N, and in the limit this ratio will get close to zero. So the ratio we're actually interested in, which is even less than this ratio, will also approach zero.


Is three fourths less than seven eighths?

Yes.