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Suppose that
Suppose that
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Q1. Suppose P, Q and R are points on a number line with P > Q > R.
Then |P-Q| is the distance PQ; |Q-R| is the distance QR; and |R-P| is the distance PR, and PR = PQ + QR.
And if PQ + QR + RQ = 20, then PR = 10 and both PQ and QR < 10
So if we replace P, Q and R with a, b and c in some (at present unknown) order the biggest we can get for |a-b| is 10.
Still wondering if I'll ever be able to do Q2.
Is that meant to be |a-n| or should it be |a-b| ?
Oh hang on. Maybe:
Consider A, B, ... Z are points on a number line with A > B > ... > Z.
Note I'm not assuming that A = a and so on, but I'm left with no new letters for this.
|A-B| + |B-C| + ..... + |Y-Z| = |Z-A|
So could this answer also be 10 ?
Bob
Last edited by Bob (2015-08-19 23:41:39)
Children are not defined by school ...........The Fonz
You cannot teach a man anything; you can only help him find it within himself..........Galileo Galilei
Sometimes I deliberately make mistakes, just to test you! …………….Bob
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Thanks! I thought 10 would be the first answer but didnt know how to prove it
For the second I guess we use the same reasoning for the first.
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