- 42857 for those who wonder - And for ops title: 23076923 
- Never realized there are so many rules for divisibility. This post fits in this category: - Forming an alternating sum of blocks of three from right to left gives a multiple of 7 - 299,999 would be 999 - 299 = 700 which is divisible by 7. And if we simply swap grouped digits to 999,299, it is also divisible by 7 since 299 - 999 = -700. - And as for 13: - Form the alternating sum of blocks of three from right to left. The result must be divisible by 13 - So we have 999 - 999 + 299 = 299. - You can continue with other rules so we can then take this - Add 4 times the last digit to the rest. The result must be divisible by 13. - So for 299 it’s 29 + 9 * 4 = 65 which divides by 13. Pretty cool. - That is indeed an absurd amount of rules (specially for 7) ! - It should be fun to develop each proof. Particularly the 1,3,2,-1,-3,-2 rule, which at first sight seems could be easily expanded to any other number. 
 
- So what? Being a prime number doesn’t mean it can’t be a divisor. Or is it the string of 9s that’s supposed to be upsetting? Why? What difference does it make? 
- 49 is divisible by 7, so why not? 
- Isn’t every number divisible by 7? - Yup, this is just a coordinated smear campaign from Big Integer. 
- Yes technically almost every number is divisible by another in some way and you’re left with a remainder that spans plenty of decimal places. - But common parlance when something is said to be divisible is that the end results is a round number… 
 
- ⅐ = 0.1̅4̅2̅8̅5̅7̅ - The above is 42857 * 7, but you also get interesting numbers for other subsets: - 7 * 7 = 49 57 * 7 = 399 857 * 7 = 5999 2857 * 7 = 19999 42857 * 7 = 299999 142857 * 7 = 999999- Related to cyclic numbers: - 142857 * 1 = 142857 142857 * 2 = 285714 142857 * 3 = 428571 142857 * 4 = 571428 142857 * 5 = 714285 142857 * 6 = 857142 142857 * 7 = 999999




