Least common factor is not a mathematical term because 1 is the least, or lowest, factor of any whole number and is common to all numbers.
The Greatest Common Factor (GCF) is the largest factor common to two or more numbers. For example, 17 is the GCF of 34, 51, and 102 because it is the largest number that is a factor common to all three numbers.
The least common factor of any set of positive integers is 1.
There are no common factors of 6 because there cannot be common factors without two or more numbers to compare. Common factors are factors that the numbers being compared have in common. Thus, there cannot be a least common factor. In general, the least common factor of two numbers is 1.
You need at least two numbers to find factors in common.
To have common factors there must be at least two numbers.
Factors and common factors refer to integers, not fractions. The least common factor of any set of positive integers is 1.
You need at least two numbers to find a GCF.
A single number cannot have common factors. To be common there need to be at least two numbers.
Of 32 and what? You need at least 2 numbers to have a common anything.
The common factors of 4 and 10 are 1 and 2.
The least (meaning lowest) common factor of any set of whole numbers is always 1. The greatest common factor of any set of whole numbers will depend on the factors of the individual whole numbers in the set.
The least common factor of any set of integers is 1.
The least common factor of any set of positive integers is 1.
The least common factor of any set of integers is 1.