Integer-valued polynomials may be used effectively to solve questions about fixed divisors of polynomials. For example, the polynomials
P with integer coefficients that always take on even number values are just those such that P/2 is integer valued. Those in turn are the polynomials that may be expressed as a linear combination with even integer coefficients of the binomial coefficients. In questions of prime number theory, such as
Schinzel's hypothesis H and the
Bateman–Horn conjecture, it is a matter of basic importance to understand the case when
P has no fixed prime divisor (this has been called ''Bunyakovsky's property
, after Viktor Bunyakovsky). By writing P'' in terms of the binomial coefficients, we see the highest fixed prime divisor is also the highest prime
common factor of the coefficients in such a representation. So Bunyakovsky's property is equivalent to coprime coefficients. As an example, the pair of polynomials n and n^2 + 2 violates this condition at p = 3: for every n the product :n(n^2 + 2) is divisible by 3, which follows from the representation : n(n^2 + 2) = 6 \binom{n}{3} + 6 \binom{n}{2} + 3 \binom{n}{1} with respect to the binomial basis, where the highest common factor of the coefficients—hence the highest fixed divisor of n(n^2+2)—is 3. ==Other rings==