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List any shortcuts you've discovered:P:
Here's a simple one,
I just remembered back to when I had a discussion with a friend in 5th grade about the multiples of 11, and noticed that whenever a two digit number was multiplied by it, the answer was the sum of the two digits, whose result was placed in between them.
e.g
11*54=594 as 5+4 = 9
11*23=253 as 2+3 = 5
This mostly useless little novelty can work fast and efficiently as long as the digits don't add to 10 or more, in which case you're equally better off doing normal multiplication.
Last edited by Toast (2006-11-04 00:06:40)
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List any shortcuts you've discovered:P:
Here's a simple one,
I just remembered back to when I had a discussion with a friend in 5th grade about the multiples of 11, and noticed that whenever a two digit number was multiplied by it, the answer was the sum of the two digits, whose result was placed in between them.
e.g
im bored, so im giong to prove that.
the two digit number can be represented as
also, i wanted to add this this morning but i had to leave.
for integer multiplications of 9 up to 9x10 the sum of the two digits always adds up to 9, and the first digit is always the multiplication - 1
eg. 9*5 = 45, 4+5 = 9, 4=5-1
eg. 9*7 = 63, 6+3 = 9, 6=7-1
i find this one very helpful, although now its more a case of 'just knowing it' rather than applying this rule
Last edited by luca-deltodesco (2006-11-04 06:37:26)
The Beginning Of All Things To End.
The End Of All Things To Come.
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I have a few towards the bottom of this page: Multiplication - Times Tables
It might be interesting to compile a whole page of them.
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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Hmmm, I've only looked briefly at everything else apart from the forum; i think i'll go look around now
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List any shortcuts you've discovered:P:
Here's a simple one,
I just remembered back to when I had a discussion with a friend in 5th grade about the multiples of 11, and noticed that whenever a two digit number was multiplied by it, the answer was the sum of the two digits, whose result was placed in between them.
I'm not bored, but I'm going to disprove that.
77*11 = 847 ≠ 7147
Why did the vector cross the road?
It wanted to be normal.
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Put the number in the middle and add anything more than a single digit to the beginning, I think was the rule.
55 * 11 = 605
66 * 11 = 726
77 * 11 = 847
88 * 11 = 968
99 * 11 = 1089
Boy let me tell you what:
I bet you didn't know it, but I'm a fiddle player too.
And if you'd care to take a dare, I'll make a bet with you.
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Toast wrote:List any shortcuts you've discovered:P:
Here's a simple one,
I just remembered back to when I had a discussion with a friend in 5th grade about the multiples of 11, and noticed that whenever a two digit number was multiplied by it, the answer was the sum of the two digits, whose result was placed in between them.I'm not bored, but I'm going to disprove that.
77*11 = 847 ≠ 7147
You've used the rule in the wrong sense ; Using the rule Toast told us at the top of the forum;
77
7+7 = 14
Put a 0 in between the two 7s: 707
Multiply the sum of the two 7s by 10: 7+7 = 14, 14x10 = 140
707+140 = 847
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Or just add neighboring digits as you go:
Units: 7
Tens: (7+7=14)7
Hundreds: (7+1)47
Answer: 847
But the topic "Shortcuts in math" is not just arithmetic, right?
I remember I had an assignment to find the maximum volume of a solid given various constraints which included surface area. I think I was supposed to create the formula, differentiate it and find a maxima. But instead I just said "the optimum solution is a sphere, and the closest this object can get to a sphere is (sizes)". Luckily I was right.
"The physicists defer only to mathematicians, and the mathematicians defer only to God ..." - Leon M. Lederman
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It's not a shortcut but more of a verification. If a number is evenly divisible by 3, the sum of it's digits is divisble by 3.
123: 1 + 2 + 3 = 6, therefore divisible by 3 (41)
943: 9 + 4 + 3 = 16, therefore not divisble by 3 (314.333)
123456789: 1+2+3+4+5+6+7+8+9 = 45, therefore divisible by 3 (41152263)
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Um, ok you can put all the shortcuts you've ever found in math (not just arithmetic), just so long as this doesn't become an infinitely broad topic
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Toast,
I use the casting off of 9s, as a shortcut.
Here's an illustration.
23 x 4 = 92.
The ssum of 2 and 3 is 5. 5x4=20. Therefore, the result should also have a successive sum of digits equal to 2. You can see that 9+2=11, and 1+1=2
It appears to me that if one wants to make progress in mathematics, one should study the masters and not the pupils. - Niels Henrik Abel.
Nothing is better than reading and gaining more and more knowledge - Stephen William Hawking.
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When you're using the Pythagorean theorem and you have sides of equal length:
Last edited by Toast (2006-11-08 19:22:53)
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