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Artful Arithmetic (Posted on 2005-04-01) Difficulty: 3 of 5

When professor Levik was very young he didn't care too much for mathematics, especially fractions. One day his teacher asked him to find the smaller of 2/5 and 3/7 and he jumped at what he though was a shortcut in solving the problem. He replaced 2/5 with 2/3 (2/(5-2)) and replaced 3/7 with 3/4 (3/(7-3)). He then replaced each of the two new fractions with 2/1 (2/(3-2)) and 3/1 (3/(4-3)), respectively, and concluded that the first fraction, 2/5, was the smaller of the two.

Was young Levik's method valid or was this case a lucky fluke?

See The Solution Submitted by Erik O.    
Rating: 2.5000 (2 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
Solution Another Method | Comment 2 of 3 |

If we let the fractions be...

a/b ~ c/d

then we test...

a/(b-a) ~ c/(d-c)

ad- ac ~ bc - ac

ad ~ bc

a ~ bc/d

a/b ~ c/d

For all a,b,c, and d greater than 0.


  Posted by Michael Cottle on 2005-04-01 16:56:18
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