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antiracistNew ago

Flat_Earth-Fat_Girth ago

ya where do u see that to describe how to get any prime number? hidden. in. plain. sight.

antiracistNew ago

How come everything you say is incomprehensible?

Can you, on the left hand side of a parenthesis, write the base 10 number, and on the right hand side write that number in your notation. I don't know what you're trying to claim about prime numbers.

So go ahead and fill this in for me.

0)

1)

2)

3)

4)

5)

6)

7)

8)

9)

10)

11)

12)

13)

14)

15)

16)

17)

18)

19)

20)

21)

22)

23)

That should be enough.

Flat_Earth-Fat_Girth ago

0) 0

1) 1

2) 2

3) 3

4) 4

5) 5

6) 6

7) 7

8) 8

9) 9

10) X

11) Y

12) 10

13) 11

14) 12

15) 13

16) 14

17) 15

18) 16

19) 17

20) 18

21) 19

22) 1X

23) 1Y

24) 20

25) 21

33) 29

34) 2X

35) 2Y

36) 30

antiracistNew ago

Great. That's base 12. What does this reveal about prime numbers?

Flat_Earth-Fat_Girth ago

All prime numbers using that method would end in 1 5 7 or Y, without exception. No numbers would end in 2 3 4 6 8 9 or 10. Using the other number system they are jumbled and random.

antiracistNew ago

All primes greater than 5, in base 10, end with 1, 3, 7, or 9 without exception.