Anonymous Wrote:Statement 2 works because x=6 and x=-6, it means that answer is 'no' No x in not equal to either 2 or -2. In data sufficiency the answer 'no' is something enough.
I hope it helped
Capthan
correction:
Sorry about misspelling of 'sometime'(something=sometimes. :)
whoa, no.
this isn't even a yes/no question.
the correct way to rephrase the prompt is this: you have to realize that whatever follows "if" is a GIVEN CONDITION that must ALWAYS be true. so, in this problem, it is a
fact, which can be taken essentially as gospel, that |x + 2| = 4.
therefore,
they are telling you, flat out, that x is either 2 or -6.
notice that this is NOT a yes/no question; it's a value question. still, we can rephrase it, because x can't be any number; it can only be one of 2 or -6. therefore, here's the best rephrase of this question:
**
WHICH of 2 or -6 is x? **
there's your rephrase.
statement (1):
rephrase: x is neither 2 nor -2.
therefore, x must be -6.
sufficient.
statement (2):
rephrase: x is either 6 or -6.
between these two, the only one on the proverbial VIP guest list is -6 (remember that the only numbers on the guest list are 2 and -6), so x must be -6.
sufficient.
answer = (d).
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epilogue:
your workup rejects statement (2) because "it gives two values -6 and 6". by this logic (which is incorrect), you should have also rejected statement (1), because it gives
infinitely many values (i.e., ALL numbers except 2 or -2).