Quote:
This explanatin is wrong, I think. If solved algebraically, its quite simple to see that the answer is 3xr/2,as this is half of or with 50% off what 3 people should be paying for travelling x miles at 3r cents/mile. Correct answer I think is A.
If we wanted the cost in cents, you would be right. You are forgetting the "How much,
in dollars, ..." part of the question. This is part of the reason we recommend picking numbers: it's not that it's difficult to solve algebraically, it's just very easy to miss something when you are thinking abstractly. When you deal with numbers, you are much more likely to remember the cents-to-dollars conversion required by the language in the problem.
Quote:
Square both sides of the given equation to eliminate the square root sign:
(x + 4)^2= 9 - I dont think this is right - Sq root (x+4)^2 = 3 MEANS (x+4)^2x0.5 = 3 which MEANS (x+4) = 3. COULD THE MODERATORS PLEASE HAVE A LOOK AT THIS ? Its just this type of basic thing that the GMAT loves to throw up. Thanks. The rest is the exoplanation.
On this one, you are forgetting the negative solution. Whenever there are variables under the square root sign, you must fall back on this property:
sqrt(x^2) = |x| {Not just x alone! There is a brief mention of this on p.126 of OG 11th edition}
The reason? Consider this example: sqrt(x^2) = 9
Following the rule, sqrt(x^2) = |x| = 9. Thus, x = 9 or -9. Plug back into the original to see that both are valid solutions.
Plugging x = 9 to check: sqrt(x^2) = sqrt(9^2) = sqrt(81) = 9
Plugging x = -9 to check: sqrt(x^2) = sqrt((-9)^2) = sqrt(81) = 9