In a group of students, 50 speak English, 50 speak French and 50 speak
Spanish. Some students speak more than one language. Prove it is
possible to divide the students into 5 groups (not necessarily equal),
so that in each group 10 speak English, 10 speak French and 10 speak
Spanish.
(In reply to
re(2): Solution (???) by nikki)
To Charlie:
I think you misread. I changed the problem to make 50 groups, not 5 groups.
To Nikki:
Yes, I did make a new problem statement. I might not have read your solution carefully enough, but it seems your proof would apply to the new case I created. In other words, the same proof could be used to prove my new problem statement. But since a counterexample exists for my new problem statement, your proof must be invalid.
That does not mean that there is a counterexample in the original problem. I doubt there is.
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Posted by Tristan
on 2004-11-11 18:26:52 |