prove that one of any three consecutive poitive integers must be divisible by 3
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let the three consecutive positive integers be
n, n+ 1, n+2
we know that the difference between the multiples of 3 is 3 only
and the same rule is followed here also
therefore any one from these is divisible by 3...
n, n+ 1, n+2
we know that the difference between the multiples of 3 is 3 only
and the same rule is followed here also
therefore any one from these is divisible by 3...
Answered by
1
Step-by-step explanation:
Let 3 consecutive positive integers be n, n + 1 and n + 2 .
Whenever a number is divided by 3, the remainder we get is either 0, or 1, or 2.
:
Therefore:
n = 3p or 3p+1 or 3p+2, where p is some integer
If n = 3p = 3(p) , then n is divisible by 3
If n = 3p + 1, then n + 2 = 3p +1 + 2 = 3 p + 3 = 3 ( p + 1 ) is divisible by 3
If n = 3p + 2, then n + 1 = 3p + 2 + 1 = 3p + 3 = 3(p + 1) is divisible by 3
Thus, we can state that one of the numbers among n, n+1 and n+2 is always divisible by 3
Hence it is solved.
THANKS
#BeBrainly.
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