mokap25,
please follow the forum rules from now on.
the forum rules require that you post the official answer to the problem.we'll let this one go, but, from now on, posts that don't follow the rules will be deleted. thanks.
mokap25 Wrote:A company bought some desks at a price of $150 each and some chairs at a price of $50 each. Did the company buy more than 40 chairs?
first,
interpret the precise meanings of "sufficient" and "insufficient".here:
YES = more than 40 chairs
NO = 40 or fewer chairs
so...
SUFFICIENT = DEFINITELY more than 40 chairs ... or, DEFINITELY 40 or fewer.NOT SUFFICIENT = you CAN have more than 40, AND you CAN also have 40 or fewer.it should be relatively quick to dispense with the two individual statements:
The total price of the desk and chairs is 5,000
you could have anywhere from 1 to 100 chairs. so, you could have more than 40, or not.
insufficient.
The company bought fewer than 20 desks
in this case, you could have anywhere from 1 to infinity chairs.
not sufficient.
Can some instructors explain a systematic approach for solving optimization type problems, I am usually lost as to where to start on such problems.
well, the most reliable approach is to
test extreme values.
if you have the two statements together:
the total price of desks and chairs is $5000.
the GREATEST number of desks is 19, so that's 19 x $150 = $2850.
in that case, you have $5000 - $2850 = $2150 left over for chairs.
that's $2150/$50 = 43 chairs. (more than 40)
... but that's the GREATEST number of desks.
if you buy FEWER desks, you're going to get even MORE chairs (because you still have to spend a total of $5000). so, you're going to have 43 or even more chairs.
all of these possibilities are over 40, so, sufficient.
(c) overall.