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| manhattan abs value Problem |
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thesamet
Guest
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Since most if's are valid, you need to see if you still can deduce the value of y. The evaluation of the second "if" gives you a contradiction to y>=2, so there's one option left. But...
You made it more complicated than it really is. Look at it that way: Statement 1 yells you that y>=2. Statement 2 tells you that y is either -8 or 14. Neither of them is sufficient but combining them, there's only one option left. |
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Guest
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Y=14 is true for y>3
hence the answer shd be E |
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| Re: manhattan abs value Problem |
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Ron Purewal
MGMAT STAFF
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yeah, you're making life too hard for yourself. here's the deal: |3 - y| = 11 is an EQUATION. equations have SOLUTIONS, which are values that solve them. that's it. in particular, any given value either solves the equation or it doesn't. you can't impose "if"s on the issue of whether a given value solves an equation; if it does, it does, and if it doesn't, it doesn't. it may be true that "if"s are helpful in FINDING the solutions to an equation, but, once you've found those solutions, you can chuck the "if" and just take the solutions. so: the equation |3 - y| = 11 has two solutions, -8 and 14. if you check each of these, you'll find that it works: |3 - (-8)| = 11, check, and |3 - 14| = 11, check. done. so statement (2) just means y = -8 or y = 14. unconditionally. there's no need to impose inequality-type restrictions; it's just "y is either this or that". |
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| manhattan abs value Problem |
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