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    Anyone notice that the inclusions are all each prime factors of the three factors (2, 3, and 5)

    Module 3 Day 3 Your Turn Part 2
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    • The Blade DancerT
      The Blade Dancer M0★ M1★ M2★ M3★ M4 M5
      last edited by debbie

      Anyone notice that the inclusions are all each prime factors of the three factors (2, 3, and 5)

      The Blade Dancer
      League of Legends, Valorant: Harlem Charades (#NA1)
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      RZ923R 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • RZ923R
        RZ923 M0★ M2★ M3★ M4★ M5 @The Blade Dancer
        last edited by RZ923

        @The-Blade-Dancer
        Hmm... I think I can answer this question.
        It’s because of the numbers Prof Loh selected.
        Remember \(A \cap B \cap C\) is \( \frac{30}{2 \times 3 \times 5} = 1\)?
        \(A \cap B\), is \( \frac{30}{2 \times 3}\), which leaves out a \(5\) from the denominator and thus making the answer \(5\), as it is basically \( \frac{2 \times 3 \times 5}{2 \times 3}\) and we cancel out the common \(2 \times 3\).
        It is the same with the other two: \(B \cap C\) leaves out the \(2\), and \(C \cap A\) leaves out the \(3\).
        Hope that helped! 🙂

        PS sorry for the very, very, very late answer. In fact I think you had already finished Module 3 😛

        Very Interesting

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        • debbieD
          debbie ADMIN M0★ M1 M5
          last edited by

          🎉 🎉 Thank you to @RZ923 for answering. 🙂 🙂 🙂

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