This seems to be cleared. Thanks mr. obvious.
Now who's posting the next question? o_O
This seems to be cleared. Thanks mr. obvious.
Now who's posting the next question? o_O
Homo Bibiens hasn't been online since he posted that so I assume he is away or very busy...
Moving swiftly on...
Prove by induction
11^n - 1 is divisible by 10 for all positive integer values of n.
Well, it's certainly true for n=1 (or 0, or 2, or 3...)
So, assume for some n that (11^n - 1) is divisible by 10, that is (11^n - 1) = 10A for some integer A.
Then (11^(n+1) - 1) = 11(11^n - 1) + 10 = 11(10A) + 10 = 10(11A + 1), and since (11A+1) is also an integer, 11^(n+1)-1 is also divisible by 10.
QED
My question? Solve this![]()
Last edited by hhEb09'1; 2007-Sep-29 at 05:37 PM.
Seven mixed fruits will work, I think. I'm assuming tax/tip, etc. are included or not part of the $15.05 total.
There's at least one more answer, I'll hold out for it.
The old aphorism, many a truth is shared in jest, certainly seems appropriate in this case! The references to the knapsack and traveling salesman problems are not irrelevant.![]()
one mixed fruit: $2.15
two hot wings: $7.10
one sampler: $5.80
solving hh's puzzle: priceless!
It's a shame that the answer isn't unique. I wonder if the answer would be unique if the fruit were $2.25 and the sampler $5.70? (And no, that's not my next question!)
Cool, how did you do it?![]()
Seems even more like a cruel joke on a waitperson, right?
I even sent the artist an email asking about that. But surely some other geeks have attacked it.
You and mr obvious may share the next honors (or, how about, next one of you to post a question gets to post the next question?)
PS:one mixed fruit: $2.25
one french fries: $2.75
three side salads: $10.05
Well the answer can be obtained by a simple Google search. I'm interested if Pghnative found it by some algorithm or some exhaustive search.
![]()
Ah, the author has commented in his blag (sic, another xkcd joke) that he thought the problem had one solution. "Long story short, it claimed 2.15*7 did not equal 15.05, and so it missed the second answer in the search, though it found the first just fine"
Floating point math was the culprit![]()
pghnative may have the honors for asking a question since I have already done so in this thread and would like some variety.
By a semi-exhaustive search. Used a spreadsheet to let me test permutations quickly. Since there had to be an odd number of the first 4 items, that cut down on the possible permutations.
OK, so there's this bar where you can get a free beer if you know a secret code. You go into it, and watch for a while. Guy # 1 comes in, the bartender says "6" and the guy answers "3" and gets a free beer. Guy # 2 comes in, the bartender says "12" and the guy answers "6" and gets a free beer. Finally, guy # 3 comes in, the bartender says "14" and the guy says "8", and gets a free beer.
The bartender looks at you and says "22" --- what do you say?
9 (10 if you count the dash).
Todd
Weirdly enough, seventh graders in the class I was teaching on Friday were talking about this function. They claimed that every number became four, if you continued iterating the function. And, of course, that's where it stops.
144 of course
Ok....
Two cars play "chicken" on a perfectly straight road, starting one mile apart. These "magical" cars accelerate instantly to 30 miles per hour and drive toward each other, ultimately crashing. Exactly halfway between the cars is a "magical" fly. This fly starts instantly at 5 miles per hour toward one of the cars. As soon as he contacts that car, he reverses course instantly with no deceleration and flies 5 miles per hour toward the other car. Upon contacting that car, it again instantly reverses direction and returns to the first car, and so on and so on. This continues until the two cars crash with the fly flattened in between them.
How far does the fly ultimately travel, adding all the distance it flies in both directions all the time from when the cars start a mile apart to the time they collide?
(Hint, it can be done without resorting to geometric series).
Shouldn't the fly's speed be greater than the car's speed? Otherwise, after it contacts the first car, the car will pull away from it and the fly will never be able to catch up to get caught between them when they crash.
Maybe you meant, 5 mph relative to the following car? Which would be a speed of 35 mph, for the fly?
oops.
I think you need to check your numbers.
The numbers may not be right but if they were, the answer would be the speed of the fly multiplied by the time it takes the cars to crash, assuming the speed of the fly is faster than the speed of the car (relative to a point on the road).
220 feet.
Which is TRS's answer with a calculator. Assuming 5MPH.
My comments were not sarcastic. I don't see any new version of Euclid's proof here, I just see a missing step in the proof. You apparently feel this is a new version and hence I encouraged you, and still encourage you, to send this in to the appropriate Mathematical body in charge of rendering verdict on these things.
If it truely is a new version, you could get your name in the history books.
Oops--I guess I did misremember the problem wrong. But yes, the solution is to find out how long (in hours) the cars take to crash, and multiply that by 5 miles per hour, to get the distance in miles the fly flew (or convert to more reasonable units!). So, it takes one minute for the cars to collide. In one minute, the fly can go 1/12 of a mile, or 440 feet. So, HeebeeJeebee99 or whatever that is, wins for two reasons--being first to point out my screw up..I mean "Lesson Learned" (at work, a manager suggested I never say "screw up" in front of budget people, but "lessons learned" instead), and for getting the correct answer to the flawed problem! (that would be the real answer, since the fly would be stuck to the one bumper flipping back and forth an infinite number of times per second till the crash).
Todd