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| OG - Quant Review DS - #83 |
| Question follow up |
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Carla
Guest
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I was going over this with a friend and he showed me the following technique.. but I just wanted to make sure that this is actually correct...
n - 3 = 2k (2k - 4) /7 = b --> 2k-4 = 7b where b is some integer then we combined these two equations by adding the left to the left and the right to the right --> n-3 + 2k - 4 = 2k + 7b ---> (can we just do this? what is this based on?) then we eliminate the 2k on both sides and simplify: n-7 = 7b n = 7b + 7 n = 7(b+1) and so we can see that n must be divisible by 7... I just wanted to check this answer so any feedback would be great.. also this is different from the solution given in the book which I did not really understand... Thanks!! Carla |
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| Re: Question follow up |
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Saurabh Malpani
Guest
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Carla,
The technique is correct---- The other way to look at it is n - 3 = 2k --> n=2k+3---(1) (2k - 4) /7 = b --> 2k-4 = 7b ----> 2k=7b+4 --(2) Now replace 2k from eq 2 in eq 1 You get n=7b+4+3 which is nothing but 7b+7 --> 7(b+1) Well this is how I apporached the problem! Saurabh Malpani where b is some integer then we combined these two equations by adding the left to the left and the right to the right --> n-3 + 2k - 4 = 2k + 7b ---> (can we just do this? what is this based on?)
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Emily Sledge
MGMAT STAFF
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Quick citation note: This is from the Official Guide for GMAT Quantitative Review. For copyright reasons, we must cite full source name.
Hi Carla, I think Saurabh pretty much covered it (thanks!), but I wanted to chime in about one thing. You asked "can we just do this?" about adding the equations from statements (1) and (2). Yes, you definitely can. It's just as acceptable as combining any two equations to solve. Consider this simpler example: (1) x + y = 5 (2) 2x - y = 4 combine to give: 3x + 0y = 9 x = 3 Your process here was exactly the same. The only difference is that your equations for this divisibility problem had a variable that you made up (the "b is any integer" step). That's probably what made it look weird to you. |
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None
Guest
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I actually did it slightly differently. Is this still "Kosher"? I took n-3 = 2k and made it k= (n/2) - (3/2). Then subbed it into the 2nd equation as:
2( (n-3)/2 ) + 3 This boils down to just "n:, and since we no that 2k-4 is divisible by 7 we now know that n is divisible by 7 as well. Is this correct as well? |
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Dan Bernstein
MGMAT STAFF
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Koser like bacon and sausage :) If I am correctly interpreting your work, you have just simplified the first statement to n = n, which doesn't really help you with the remainder of the problem.
My suggestion is to really focus on you DS process: Step 1: Consider rephrase of question -no good rephrase in this case Step 2: Choose easier statement -Statement (2) 2k-4 is divisible by 7 is easier, since there is no mention of n. Because statement (2) does not mention n, eliminate BD from BD/ACE grid. Step 3: Rephrase statement (1) -Statement (1) n-3 = 2k, so n=2k+3 -Since n depends on k we do not know whether n is divisible by 7. Eliminate A from ACE grid Step 4: Combine statements -since 2k=n-3 (1), and 2k-4 is div by 7 (2), n-3-4 is divisible by 7 (I simply substituted n-3 from (1) for 2k (2). Thus n-7 is divisible by 7, so n must be a multiple of 7. The correct answer is C Hope that helps! -dan
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Last edited by Dan Bernstein on Tue Jun 12, 2007 5:00 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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| Another alternative |
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GMATPaduan
Guest
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Another way to solve the problem: Plugging in Numbers
Is n divisible by 7? (1) n-3 = 2k n= 2k+3 if k = 2 yes, if k =3 -no --Not Sufficient (2) 2k-4 is divisible by 7 Says nothing about N -- not sufficient Combination: If 2k-4 is divisible by 7-- k = 9, 16, 23, etc n=2k+3 2 * any of the above (9, 16, 23) - 4 is divisible by 7 C is sufficient |
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| Plugging In |
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Dan Bernstein
MGMAT STAFF
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GMATPaduan,
You are correct. One of the primary mistakes that students make on algebraic problems throughout the Quant section is to search only for the algebraic solutions. Often, students do not readily "see" an algebraic approach, so they then waste several minutes searching for one. Your "brute force" method of plugging in numbers can be just as effective on many difficult algebraic problems. Remember, your goal is simply to answer the question correctly in approximately 2 minutes. The computer (and thus your GMAT score) doesn't care how you arrived at your answer, just that you got there! |
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| Correction |
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GMATPaduan
Guest
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I have a mis-print: The last part of my plugging in Numbers Solution should be:
Combination: If 2k-4 is divisible by 7-- k = 9, 16, 23, etc n=2k+3 2 * any of the above (9, 16, 23) +3 is divisible by 7 C is sufficient |
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| No Algebra |
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Kris
Guest
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combining I & II
From statement II , 2K- 4 is divisible by 7 for statement I n=2k + 3=(2k- 4) + 7 So n will also be divisible by 7. in simple terms, if x is divisible by 7, then x+ 7, x + 14 , x+ 21 ..... are all divisible by 7; |
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| OG - Quant Review DS - #83 |
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