Talk:Prime number: Difference between revisions

Mike Battaglia (talk | contribs)
m Text replacement - "'''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.'''" to "'''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.''' <span style="color:#800000">''...
WikispacesArchive>Mike Battaglia
m Text replacement - "'''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.'''" to "'''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.''' <span style="color:#800000">''...
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= ARCHIVED WIKISPACES DISCUSSION BELOW =
{{WSArchiveLink}}
'''All discussion below is archived from the Wikispaces export in its original unaltered form.'''
 
<span style="color:#800000">'''PLEASE MAKE ANY NEW COMMENTS <u>ABOVE</u> THIS SECTION.'''</span> Anything below here is for archival purposes only.
 
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== Please, more 'precisione' in the redaction! ==
The wording of this page is not quite understandable. Please someone write better descriptions here said.
 
- '''Osmiorisbendi''' July 18, 2011, 01:46:51 PM UTC-0700
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Which of the words or expressions would you consider not understandable?
 
- '''hstraub''' January 26, 2012, 12:58:29 AM UTC-0800
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Perhaps we should explain these terms:
 
1.  "composite", as used in the expression "For composite EDOs, ...", means "non-prime" (since any such number can be considered to be "composed" of its multiplicative factors; e.g. the composite integer 6 is the product of multiplying the prime numbers 2 and 3).
 
2.  "co-prime":  Two integers are co-prime if they have no common prime factors; e.g. 14 and 15 are co-prime since 14 has only the prime factors 2 and 7 whilst 15 has only the prime factors 3 and 5, so they share no common prime factor.
 
- '''YahyaA''' October 29, 2015, 06:06:21 PM UTC-0700
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The terms "xenharmonician" and "ekmelician" are surely incomprehensible to most people, including many of our readers.  (What DOES that second word mean?!)
 
- '''YahyaA''' October 29, 2015, 06:09:24 PM UTC-0700
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Return to "Prime number" page.