Store sold a total of 90 copies during seven days and it sold different numbers of copies on any two of the days.
The greatest number of copies on Saturday and the second greatest number of copies on Friday, did Store S sell more than 11 copies on Friday?
(1) Last week Store S sold 8 copies of the book on Thursday.
(2) Last week Store S sold 38 copies of the book on Saturday.
1. Assuming 8 is the value of the third greatest number of copies,
the least value of the Friday and Saturday sales combined is
where the number of copies sold in the third to 6th greatest is
8+7+6+5.
74 copies would be sold over Friday and Saturday.
The saturday sale, as the greatest, is greater than the mean
74/2=37
Values for the friday sale, range from 9 to (74-38=36)
2. 38 copies sold on Saturday, 52 on the remaining days
n2 + R(n) = D, where
n2 = second greatest number of copies sold
R(n) = an approximating function
where n is the integer value of the 3rd greatest
number of copies and the numbers of copies are
consecutively summed from 3rd greatest to least.
D = the sum of the 2nd greatest, 3rd greatest....to the least.
Minimum value of n2
occurs at the maximum value of R(n)
At D = 52,
the greatest value for R(n) is 40 (R(10) = 10+9+8+7+6)
Least value for n2 is 12
*Note R2 is only a tuning function that allows approximation of R(n). Actual specified minimum of n2 depends on the "probability" spaces between the integer values. Consider the following counter. To the left is the probable value of n2 and to the right are indexed R(n) values.
12 [40] [10 9 8 7 6] -- or --12 [40] [11 10 9 8 5]
-1 +1
11 [41] [10 cannot move up]
[no currency/space built up at 12--10 9 8 7 6][diff. is 1]
Compare:
gmat-prep-1-ds-six-countries-in-a-certain-region-sent-t2797.html