Help! Divisible questions

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11plusparent
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 1:56 am

Help! Divisible questions

Post by 11plusparent »

How do you do questions like this:

You have numbers 4, 3, 6, 8, 5 on some cards. What is the smallest number you can make which is divisible by 4?

What method is there for these type of questions?

Thanks for any advice, which I'd be grateful for tonight!!!!
yogkruti
Posts: 267
Joined: Sun Mar 21, 2010 6:06 pm

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by yogkruti »

Look up HCF and LCM in google

HCF = Highest Common Factor
LCM = Lowest Common Multiple


Eg:
http://www.cimt.plymouth.ac.uk/projects ... k8_2i4.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
yoyo123
Posts: 8099
Joined: Mon Jun 18, 2007 3:32 pm
Location: East Kent

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by yoyo123 »

is the question from a multiple choice paper? If so use answers to help you. the last digit cannot be 3 or 5 because to be divisible by 4 number must be even, so you can discard those answers straight away.

if standard then quickly write out all possibilities (without 3 or 5 as last digit)

eg 83,456
45, 368 etc to be divisible by 4 you can halve it , then halve again to give a whole number..
layla22
Posts: 116
Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2010 7:48 pm

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by layla22 »

Not sure if this is correct method, but using LCM and a bit of logic-
1. Cannot end in 3 or 5 has to be 4 , 6, 8
2. So can have these poss. ... ... ... ... 8
... ... ... ... 6
... ... ... ... 4
3. Now need to decide on 1st no. To be smallest need to start with 3, then use up the other nos. the smallest first, one after the other to build up smallest no. divisible by 4.
i.e. 34568.
4. NB the 8 has to be at the end otherwise putting it anywhere else will make no. bigger. Does that make sense?

Maybe someone has easier way!
11plusparent
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 1:56 am

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by 11plusparent »

This is the way I was doing it but sometimes I found it took quite long..Thank You to your replies!

It's my DD's last exam today!! Such a relief for her and me!!

Well done to all children and parents for getting through this stressful time!!!!
Chilled
Posts: 118
Joined: Tue Mar 02, 2010 9:13 pm

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by Chilled »

There are some rules abouthow to check if a number is divisible by another number.
If the number is even it is divisible by 2.

If the sum of the numbers adds up to a number that is divisible by 3 then it is divisible by 3, e.g. the sum of the numbers 213609 adds up to 21 which is 3 x 7 so it is divisible by 3.

If the last 2 digits are divisible by 4 then the whole number is divisible by 4.

The smallest number you can make is 34568. The last 2 digits are 68 which is divisible by 4. If it wasn't you'd have to try the next smallest number and so on.

You can easily google a list of divisibility rules.
11plusparent
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 1:56 am

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by 11plusparent »

Thank you Chilled for this very useful information..wish I wrote sooner on this forum.
moved
Posts: 3826
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Location: Chelmsford and pleased

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by moved »

Other useful tips.

If the digits add to 9 then it is divisible by 9. If it is even and the digits add to a number divisible by three then it is in the 6 times table. Divisible by 8 use the last three digits - if they divide by 8 then the whole divides by 8 (as 1000 is divisible by 8 ).

Divisible by 11 is a case of adding every other digit and then adding the digits that you didn't add the first time and subtracting the second total from the first. If the answer is 0 or divisible by 11 then it is in the 11 times table e.g.

112233

1 + 2 + 3 = 6
6 - (1 + 2 + 3) = 0

or

847

8 + 7 = 15
15 - 4 = 11

I don't know of an easy trick for 7.


Multiplying large numbers by 11. E.g. 21 times 11, write 2_1, then add the 2 and 1 and write the answer in the middle
21 x 11 = 231
17 x 11 = 187
This is only difficult if the digits add to something beyond 9, e.g. 77 x 11 = 7_7 (7+7 = 14)
Keep the 4 and carry the 1 to hundreds column (7+1)47 to give 847.
11plusparent
Posts: 14
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2010 1:56 am

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by 11plusparent »

Thanks Moved!! Some more great tips. I'm feeling pretty silly for not asking for help earlier. I underestimated the power of this forum.
moved
Posts: 3826
Joined: Fri Oct 12, 2007 1:42 pm
Location: Chelmsford and pleased

Re: Help! Divisible questions

Post by moved »

11plusparent wrote:Thanks Moved!! Some more great tips. I'm feeling pretty silly for not asking for help earlier. I underestimated the power of this forum.
:D :D
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