Author Topic: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.  (Read 1046793 times)

grateful

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11685 on: August 26, 2024, 01:45:40 pm »

grateful

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11686 on: September 03, 2024, 09:01:17 pm »
14,339

Cock Van Der Palm

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11687 on: September 03, 2024, 11:00:27 pm »
Can we please start over.  I missed a couple.

0

Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11688 on: September 04, 2024, 09:16:59 am »
Can we please start over.  I missed a couple.

0
fun fact
It is the lone integer that is neither a composite nor a prime number.
slack

Julian, Bespoke SEXPERT

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11689 on: September 04, 2024, 10:59:02 am »
Can we please start over.  I missed a couple.

0
fun fact
It is the lone integer that is neither a composite nor a prime number.
What about 7?
LVMH

sweetcell

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11690 on: September 04, 2024, 11:55:56 am »
Can we please start over.  I missed a couple.

0
fun fact
It is the lone integer that is neither a composite nor a prime number.
What about 7?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)


primary school started here today.  looks like some of you might need to go back...
<sig>

Cock Van Der Palm

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11691 on: September 04, 2024, 12:14:29 pm »
For all the idiots that didn't know what a composite number is:

A composite number is a positive integer that can be formed by multiplying two smaller positive integers.

Thanks Google

nkotb

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11692 on: September 04, 2024, 12:43:09 pm »
7 isn't a prime number?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)


Julian, Bespoke SEXPERT

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11693 on: September 04, 2024, 01:31:42 pm »
Can we please start over.  I missed a couple.

0
fun fact
It is the lone integer that is neither a composite nor a prime number.
What about 7?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)
Oh, gotcha. How about 13 -- that's Taylor Swift's lucky number.
LVMH

Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11694 on: September 04, 2024, 02:19:03 pm »
7 isn't a prime number?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)

what is this lunacy
are we now questioning math!?
 7 is a prime number
https://www.smartick.com/lp/is-7-a-prime-number/
slack

Julian, Bespoke SEXPERT

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11695 on: September 04, 2024, 04:24:31 pm »
7 isn't a prime number?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)

what is this lunacy
are we now questioning math!?
 7 is a prime number
https://www.smartick.com/lp/is-7-a-prime-number/
I love Sweets but it’s hilarious to me that he got all uppity about a clear joke and decided to “well, actually” someone about a Pre-Algebra question . . . and then he got it wrong.
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sweetcell

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11696 on: September 05, 2024, 01:36:42 pm »
7 isn't a prime number?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)

what is this lunacy
are we now questioning math!?
 7 is a prime number
https://www.smartick.com/lp/is-7-a-prime-number/
I love Sweets but it’s hilarious to me that he got all uppity about a clear joke and decided to “well, actually” someone about a Pre-Algebra question . . . and then he got it wrong.

i blame a 14% barrel-aged sweet barleywine, after a dry week.  i only vaguely remember posting that.  hilarious indeed!
<sig>

Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11697 on: September 05, 2024, 02:08:47 pm »
7 isn't a prime number?

7 is neither composite nor prime (by definition, a prime number cannot be composite and vice versa)

what is this lunacy
are we now questioning math!?
 7 is a prime number
https://www.smartick.com/lp/is-7-a-prime-number/
I love Sweets but it’s hilarious to me that he got all uppity about a clear joke and decided to “well, actually” someone about a Pre-Algebra question . . . and then he got it wrong.

i blame a 14% barrel-aged sweet barleywine, after a dry week.  i only vaguely remember posting that.  hilarious indeed!
I can only imagine what 2AM drunk texts Sweets Exs got back in the day if this is what he posts when he's had too much
I would think this is worthy a whole thread to come up with what they might have been
slack

grateful

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Re: A rolling compendium of integers: a guide to whole numbers.
« Reply #11698 on: September 09, 2024, 04:29:37 pm »