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Kannagi
Hi,

I have a doubt in questions where we are asked to find the number of distinct factors of a number.

Do we have to consider the total number of factors which are positive factors + negative factors or only the positive factors?

Example:
Q. Distinct prime factors of 36

Positive factors: 9
Negative factors: 9

So is the answer to the question be 9 or 18 ?

Can the factors be negative or they are always positive?

Factors are always positive.
No of distinct prime factors of 36 is 2 (they are 2 and 3)
No of distinct factors of 36 is 9.

Multiple can be positive/0/negative.
There are infinite multiples of any integer e.g. multiples of 36 are 36, 72, 0, -36, -72 etc.
0 is a multiple of every number.
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Hi Karishma,

Please clarify the doubt stated below:

From the OG13:

If x and y are integers and x does not equal 0, then x is a divisor (factor) of y provided that y = xn for some integer n.


From this definition, we can see that -2 is a factor of 10, since we can express 10 as the product of -2 and some integer. That is 10 = (-2)(-5)

So, can negative numbers be factors?
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Firstly, negative factors are possible! ans its very clear from the definition you provided.

BUT, and its a big BUT that we will NEVER use negative factors on the gmat.

It is also a topic of debate among some theorists, but on GMAT FACTORS ARE ALWAYS POSITIVE. Period

problem will MOSTLY have the words : positive factors to make it explicitly clear
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VeritasKarishma


Factors are always positive.
No of distinct prime factors of 36 is 2 (they are 2 and 3)
No of distinct factors of 36 is 9.

Multiple can be positive/0/negative.
There are infinite multiples of any integer e.g. multiples of 36 are 36, 72, 0, -36, -72 etc.
0 is a multiple of every number.

Dear VeritasKarishma, -2*-1 = 2. So -2 is a negative divisor. We have learnt in school that product of two negatives makes a positive. So is it that for the limited purpose of GMAT, negative factors are ignored? What might be the ideology behind the same?

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