- #1
silvermane
Gold Member
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1. The problem statement:
Consider 3 positive integers, a, b, c. Let [tex]d_{1}[/tex] = gcd(b,c) = 1. Prove that the greatest number dividing all three of a, b, c is gcd([tex]d_{1}[/tex],c)
3. My go at the proof and thoughts:
Well, I know that the common divisors of a and b are precisely the divisors of [tex]d_{1}[/tex]
I also know that to get the gcd(a,b,c) we need to consider a,b's gcd with c to get the overall gcd for all three numbers.
I think that I need to write it as a linear combination for a,b, and c, but I'm stuck. This problem seems easy too, but I think there's something that I'm missing.
Consider 3 positive integers, a, b, c. Let [tex]d_{1}[/tex] = gcd(b,c) = 1. Prove that the greatest number dividing all three of a, b, c is gcd([tex]d_{1}[/tex],c)
3. My go at the proof and thoughts:
Well, I know that the common divisors of a and b are precisely the divisors of [tex]d_{1}[/tex]
I also know that to get the gcd(a,b,c) we need to consider a,b's gcd with c to get the overall gcd for all three numbers.
I think that I need to write it as a linear combination for a,b, and c, but I'm stuck. This problem seems easy too, but I think there's something that I'm missing.