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Speaking Volumes (Posted on 2004-11-10) Difficulty: 3 of 5
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.

See The Solution Submitted by Brian Smith    
Rating: 3.1667 (6 votes)

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re: Software program proof | Comment 12 of 19 |
(In reply to Software program proof by Penny)

For example, when 10 speak English, French and Spanish (efs= 10), 18 speak only English and French (ef= 18), 16 speak only English and Spanish (es= 16), 3 speak only French and Spanish (fs= 3), 6 speak only English (e= 6), 19 speak only French (f= 19), and 21 speak only Spanish (s= 21), the program found this decomposition:

Group  1:  efs= 10
Group  2:  ef= 10 s= 10
Group  3:  ef= 8 es= 2 fs= 2 s= 6
Group  4:  es= 10 f= 10
Group  5:  es= 4 fs= 1 e= 6 f= 9 s= 5


  Posted by Penny on 2004-11-14 05:40:24
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