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899 and Level 3

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Yesterday I worked with a student who knew that 5 × 5 = 25 but couldn’t remember what 4 × 6 is. I didn’t use the variable “n”, but I used some examples from the times table to help her understand that (n-1)(n+1) = n² – 1. Always. Then I said to her, “30 × 30 = 900, so how much is 29 × 31?” She answered, “899?” I told her, “Yes, it is.” She was pretty pleased with herself.

29 and 31 are twin primes, so that makes 29 × 31 = 899 even cooler.

899 is also the hypotenuse of a Pythagorean triple:

Print the puzzles or type the solution on this excel file: 10-factors-897-904

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