Habs question help
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Habs question help
Following is the question from Habs 2010 paper.
Four friends, Alwyn, Bax, Coates and Delius have lunch together. Although each eats a differently priced snack, they share the bill equally. Yesterday, this resulted in Alwyn paying £1 less than the cost of his snack, Bax paying £3 more, Coates £4 less and Delius paid £4. What was the actual price of the snack that each friend ordered?
Alwyn: ________
Bax: ________
Coates: _______
Delius: _______
I know we can make 3 equations with 3 variables and substitute variables in equations to get the answer, but is there any more simple way of solving the same?
Four friends, Alwyn, Bax, Coates and Delius have lunch together. Although each eats a differently priced snack, they share the bill equally. Yesterday, this resulted in Alwyn paying £1 less than the cost of his snack, Bax paying £3 more, Coates £4 less and Delius paid £4. What was the actual price of the snack that each friend ordered?
Alwyn: ________
Bax: ________
Coates: _______
Delius: _______
I know we can make 3 equations with 3 variables and substitute variables in equations to get the answer, but is there any more simple way of solving the same?
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Re: Habs question help
This on is fairly easy as we know they paid £4 each so total = £16. So D's snack was £4, C's = £8 A's=£5 and B's £1 - no need for anything too complex.muksoni wrote:Following is the question from Habs 2010 paper.
Four friends, Alwyn, Bax, Coates and Delius have lunch together. Although each eats a differently priced snack, they share the bill equally. Yesterday, this resulted in Alwyn paying £1 less than the cost of his snack, Bax paying £3 more, Coates £4 less and Delius paid £4. What was the actual price of the snack that each friend ordered?
Alwyn: ________
Bax: ________
Coates: _______
Delius: _______
I know we can make 3 equations with 3 variables and substitute variables in equations to get the answer, but is there any more simple way of solving the same?
Re: Habs question help
Thanks. I knew i was missing some simple trick.
Re: Habs question help
Its just my logic, but I think there is one correction to cost of D's snack :
We know the total = £16.
The answers though, do not add to 16 :
D's snack was £4, C's = £8 A's=£5 and B's £1 => Making the total as 18.
A way to work this out probably is :
A-1=4, B+3=4, C-4=4, D=4
A=5, B=1, C=8 : All these snacks add to 14. So the last snack for D must be 2, making the total bill as 16.
Hence D's snack = 2
Snack costs => A = 5, B = 1, C = 8, D = 2
I think it looks right, but I hope I got this correct....
We know the total = £16.
The answers though, do not add to 16 :
D's snack was £4, C's = £8 A's=£5 and B's £1 => Making the total as 18.
A way to work this out probably is :
A-1=4, B+3=4, C-4=4, D=4
A=5, B=1, C=8 : All these snacks add to 14. So the last snack for D must be 2, making the total bill as 16.
Hence D's snack = 2
Snack costs => A = 5, B = 1, C = 8, D = 2
I think it looks right, but I hope I got this correct....
Having one child makes you a parent; having two you are a referee.
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- Posts: 12901
- Joined: Fri Sep 15, 2006 9:51 am
- Location: The Seaside
Re: Habs question help
on beach
brain addled
will look again later... am sure we have looked at this one before....
brain addled
will look again later... am sure we have looked at this one before....
Re: Habs question help
The question has effectively told us each person paid £4.
So all we have to do is take £4 and work out their 'fair share' based on the info already given.
A paid £4 and has underpaid by £1 => A should have paid £5.
B paid £4 and has overpaid by £3 => B should have paid £1.
C paid £4 and has underpaid by £4 => C should have paid £8.
The real total was £16 and the others should have paid £14 (£5 + £1 + £8). So D should have paid £2.
That's prob how I would explain it to my kid.
PS I went to Habs - seems they have hardly changed the 11+ maths exam since I did it in 1998!
So all we have to do is take £4 and work out their 'fair share' based on the info already given.
A paid £4 and has underpaid by £1 => A should have paid £5.
B paid £4 and has overpaid by £3 => B should have paid £1.
C paid £4 and has underpaid by £4 => C should have paid £8.
The real total was £16 and the others should have paid £14 (£5 + £1 + £8). So D should have paid £2.
That's prob how I would explain it to my kid.
PS I went to Habs - seems they have hardly changed the 11+ maths exam since I did it in 1998!