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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/HCF_and_LCM_of_p_and_p_plus_1

HCF and LCM of p and p plus 1? - Answers

To consecutive numbers cannot have any common prime factors. Thus the HCF of p and (p+1) will be 1. To find the LCM, you multiply two numbers together and divide by the HCF. In this case, you'd do p(p+1)/1 This simplifies to p2+p So the HCF is 1 and the LCM is p2+p



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HCF and LCM of p and p plus 1? - Answers

https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/HCF_and_LCM_of_p_and_p_plus_1

To consecutive numbers cannot have any common prime factors. Thus the HCF of p and (p+1) will be 1. To find the LCM, you multiply two numbers together and divide by the HCF. In this case, you'd do p(p+1)/1 This simplifies to p2+p So the HCF is 1 and the LCM is p2+p



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https://math.answers.com/math-and-arithmetic/HCF_and_LCM_of_p_and_p_plus_1

HCF and LCM of p and p plus 1? - Answers

To consecutive numbers cannot have any common prime factors. Thus the HCF of p and (p+1) will be 1. To find the LCM, you multiply two numbers together and divide by the HCF. In this case, you'd do p(p+1)/1 This simplifies to p2+p So the HCF is 1 and the LCM is p2+p

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      To consecutive numbers cannot have any common prime factors. Thus the HCF of p and (p+1) will be 1. To find the LCM, you multiply two numbers together and divide by the HCF. In this case, you'd do p(p+1)/1 This simplifies to p2+p So the HCF is 1 and the LCM is p2+p
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