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  2. Divisibility rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divisibility_rule

    Divisibility by 7 can be tested by a recursive method. A number of the form 10x + y is divisible by 7 if and only if x − 2y is divisible by 7. In other words, subtract twice the last digit from the number formed by the remaining digits. Continue to do this until a number is obtained for which it is known whether it is divisible by 7.

  3. Parity (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parity_(mathematics)

    The following laws can be verified using the properties of divisibility. They are a special case of rules in modular arithmetic, and are commonly used to check if an equality is likely to be correct by testing the parity of each side. As with ordinary arithmetic, multiplication and addition are commutative and associative in modulo 2 arithmetic ...

  4. Divisibility (ring theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divisibility_(ring_theory)

    Divisibility is a useful concept for the analysis of the structure of commutative rings because of its relationship with the ideal structure of such rings. Definition

  5. Division (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Division_(mathematics)

    Division in this sense does not require ∗ to have any particular properties (such as commutativity, associativity, or an identity element). A magma for which both a \ b and b / a exist and are unique for all a and all b (the Latin square property) is a quasigroup. In a quasigroup, division in this sense is always possible, even without an ...

  6. Sanity check - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanity_check

    Dimensional analysis may be used as a sanity check of physical equations: the two sides of any equation must be commensurable or have the same dimensions. A person who has calculated the power output of a car to be 700 kJ may have omitted a factor, since the unit joules is a measure of energy, not power (energy per unit time).

  7. Lattice (order) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_(order)

    The set {,,,,,} partially ordered by divisibility is not a lattice. Every pair of elements has an upper bound and a lower bound, but the pair 2, 3 has three upper bounds, namely 12, 18, and 36, none of which is the least of those three under divisibility (12 and 18 do not divide each other).

  8. What's the 10/15 rule and does it really help you pay off ...

    www.aol.com/finance/whats-10-15-rule-does...

    By applying the 10/15 rule, your average payment each month would amount to $2,290 — an extra $690 — but your mortgage would be paid off in just over 13-and-a-half years and you’d save over ...

  9. Digit sum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digit_sum

    Digit sums and digital roots can be used for quick divisibility tests: a natural number is divisible by 3 or 9 if and only if its digit sum (or digital root) is divisible by 3 or 9, respectively. For divisibility by 9, this test is called the rule of nines and is the basis of the casting out nines technique for checking calculations.