Easy one but need correct explnation

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Easy one but need correct explnation

by prachi18oct » Tue Jun 17, 2014 2:47 am
How many different factors does 50 have?
a)3
b)4
c)5
d)6
6)8

For me the different factors will be 1,2,5,10,50 and -1,-2,-5,10,-50 as the word positive is not mentioned explicitly.

Answer mentioned is d)

Am I wrong? I don't see that option with my answer..I am confused.Pls explain.

The question is from Economist Mock GMAT.
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by GMATGuruNY » Tue Jun 17, 2014 5:00 am
On the GMAT, problems about factors are constrained to POSITIVE factors.
The problem above would probably read as follows:
How many different POSITIVE INTEGERS are factors of 50?

a)3
b)4
c)5
d)6
6)8
Factor pairs of 50:
1*50
2*25
5*10
6 different factors.

The correct answer is D.

An alternate way to count the number of positive factors of an integer:

1) Prime-factorize the integer
2) Add 1 to each exponent
3) Multiply


For example:
72 = 2³ * 3².
Adding 1 to each exponent and multiplying, we get (3+1)*(2+1) = 12 factors.

Here's the reasoning. To determine how many factors can be created from 72 = 2³ * 3², we need to determine the number of choices we have of each prime factor:

For 2, we can use 2�, 2¹, 2², or 2³, giving us 4 choices.
For 3, we can use 3�, 3¹, or 3², giving us 3 choices.

Multiplying, we get 4*3 = 12 possible factors.

In the problem above:
50 = 2¹*5².
Adding 1 to each exponent and multiplying, we get:
(1+1)(2+1) = 6 different factors.

Similar problems:

https://www.beatthegmat.com/divisors-t85731.html
https://www.beatthegmat.com/all-factors- ... 15019.html
https://www.beatthegmat.com/if-n-has-15- ... 64736.html
A problem about counting only the ODD factors:
https://www.beatthegmat.com/gmat-loves-f ... 72876.html
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by prachi18oct » Tue Jun 17, 2014 6:24 am
Yes , I missed 25 so there will be 6 positive factors and 6 negative.

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by [email protected] » Tue Jun 17, 2014 11:11 am
Hi prachi18oct,

When the five answer choices to a Quant question are numbers, then you have an interesting piece of information to work with: ONE of those numbers MUST be the answer to the question.

In the scenario that you described, you came up with an answer that wasn't there, so something is clearly "off" about how you approached the question. Either you "missed" something or you misinterpreted something. There's nothing "bad" about making a mistake in these scenarios because you have the opportunity to "catch" it and fix it.

Here, my first thought would be "did I get ALL of the factors?" From here, you'd realize that you forgot 25 (and -25). Then you'd have 12 factors which still isn't an option. Then I'd think "including the negatives gives me an answer that's too big, so let's not include the negatives...."; this leaves us with the correct answer: 6.

All throughout the GMAT, you'll be expected to interpret information, so if you find that "your interpretation" doesn't lead to any of the answers, you have to be ready to "step back" and re-interpret the prompt. The GMAT is never trying to "trick" you (that's not what it's built for); the writers will give you enough information to do the job (sometimes the information that you need is in the answers though).

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