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Primes, Factors, & Multiples NOtes
Primes, Factors, & Multiples NOtes

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... chosen carefully, you can generate m–1 different integers. These are usually converted to random numbers in the range 0 to 1 by dividing by m. If required, numbers in any specified range can then be generated by scaling (and then rounding if only integer values are required). The first number in the ...
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Infinite numbers: what are they and what are they good for?

... 3. 0 is not the successor of any natural number. 4. Distinct numbers have distinct successors. 5. If P(0) is true, and whenever P(k) is true, P(k + ) is also true, then P(n) is true for all natural numbers n. Using these axioms, we can develop virtually all mathematics that does not involve infinite ...
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... 2) When MULTIPLYING with decimals, the decimal points are irrelevant until the very end. Multiply the numbers like normal and count the number of digits that are behind the decimal point in each number. This is how many places you move the decimal point in the product beginning at the end of the num ...
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24(2)

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Proofs of Fermat's little theorem

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