Beginner

Number: Operations and Primes

AicademyAicademy
·Edexcel GCSE Mathematics·Pearson Edexcel 1MA1·7 min
N1·N2·N3·N4

Ordering Numbers

All numbers can be placed on a number line. The six comparison symbols are:

SymbolMeaningExample
equal to
not equal to
less than
greater than
less than or equal to
greater than or equal to

To compare a mixture of fractions, decimals and integers, convert everything to decimals first.

Worked example — place in ascending order:

Convert to decimals: ;

Ascending order:

For negative numbers: further left on the number line means smaller. .

The Four Operations and Place Value

Place value determines what each digit in a number is worth. In 3,274.56, the digit 3 is worth 3,000; the digit 5 is worth .

The four operations — add, subtract, multiply, divide — apply to all number types: integers, decimals, fractions (proper, improper, and mixed numbers), both positive and negative.

Adding/subtracting fractions — find a common denominator:

Multiplying fractions — multiply numerators, then denominators; simplify:

Dividing fractions — keep the first fraction, change ÷ to ×, flip the second (its reciprocal):

Mixed numbers — convert to improper fractions before any operation: .

Formal Written Methods

Formal written methods are structured column techniques that Edexcel expects students to apply reliably.

Column addition/subtraction — align digits by place value; carry or borrow across columns:

For decimals, align the decimal points:

Long multiplication — split the multiplier by place value:

For decimals: — ignore decimal points, compute , then place the decimal: 2 decimal digits in , 1 in gives 3 total →

Long division — worked example:

Result: ✓. Check:

For non-integer quotients, continue past the decimal point (bringing down zeros): .

Priority of Operations — BIDMAS

Operations must be performed in a specific order. BIDMAS (also written BODMAS) sets this out:

LetterOperationPriority
BBrackets1st — work inside brackets first
IIndices (powers and roots)2nd
D/MDivision and Multiplication3rd — equal priority, work left to right
A/SAddition and Subtraction4th — equal priority, work left to right

Worked example — calculate :

  1. Brackets:
  2. Indices:
  3. Multiplication then division (left to right): , then
  4. Addition:

Inverse operations undo each other: addition ↔ subtraction; multiplication ↔ division; squaring ↔ square root. Used to rearrange equations and verify answers.

The reciprocal of is . The reciprocal of is . Any number multiplied by its reciprocal equals 1.

Studying this for an exam?

Generate a personalised learning path for this subject. Free to get started.

Create a learning path

Prime Numbers and Factor Vocabulary

A prime number has exactly two factors: 1 and itself. The primes start: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29 …

1 is not prime — it has only one factor. 2 is the only even prime.

TermDefinitionExample
Factor (divisor)Divides a number exactly with no remainderFactors of 12: 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12
MultipleResult of multiplying a number by any positive integerMultiples of 5: 5, 10, 15, 20 …
Common factorA factor shared by two or more numbersCommon factors of 12 and 18: 1, 2, 3, 6
Common multipleA multiple shared by two or more numbersCommon multiples of 4 and 6: 12, 24, 36 …
HCFHighest Common Factor — largest common factorHCF(12, 18) = 6
LCMLowest Common Multiple — smallest positive common multipleLCM(4, 6) = 12

Prime Factorisation

Every integer greater than 1 can be written as a product of prime factors in exactly one way — the Unique Factorisation Theorem.

Factor tree method — worked example: write 360 as a product of prime factors.

Split 360 repeatedly into factor pairs until all branches end in primes:

Written in index notation:

Check:

The order of splits in the factor tree does not matter — the final product of prime factors is always the same.

Using Prime Factorisation for HCF and LCM

Prime factorisation is the most reliable method for finding HCF and LCM of larger numbers.

Worked example — find the HCF and LCM of 72 and 120.

Step 1 — factorise both:

Step 2 — HCF (highest common factor): take the lowest power of each prime that appears in both:

Step 3 — LCM (lowest common multiple): take the highest power of each prime that appears in either:

Verification: for any two positive integers, .

Check: and

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Including 1 as a prime number

1 has only one factor (itself), so it does not meet the definition. Prime numbers must have exactly two distinct factors: 1 and the number itself.

2. BIDMAS division/multiplication order

Division and multiplication have equal priority — work left to right. , not .

3. HCF vs LCM confusion

HCF uses the lowest powers of shared primes (what fits into both numbers). LCM uses the highest powers of all primes that appear (what both numbers divide into). As a quick check: HCF ≤ smaller number ≤ larger number ≤ LCM.

4. Not converting mixed numbers before operating

requires converting to — operating directly on the whole and fractional parts separately gives the wrong answer.

MistakeCorrection
"1 is a prime number"1 is neither prime nor composite — exactly two factors required
""Left-to-right: , then
"HCF of 12 and 18 is 36"36 is the LCM; HCF is 6 (highest factor in both)

Generate revision on any topic you study

Type any topic you're studying and Aicademy generates a complete lesson, quiz, and flashcard set — personalised to your level.

Lessons on anything

Structured, level-matched lessons on any topic you study

Practice quizzes

Find out what you actually know before the exam does

Flashcard sets

Lock in key concepts with instant revision cards

Ask Aica

Stuck on something? Get a clear explanation, any time

Next

Powers, Roots and Standard Form

Related lessons

7 Slides

Lesson

Powers, Roots and Standard Form

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

6 Slides

Lesson

Fractions, Decimals and Percentages

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago

6 Slides

Lesson

Rounding, Estimation and Accuracy

Edexcel GCSE Mathematics · Pearson Edexcel 1MA1

1 day ago