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Monkeys and Coconuts (Posted on 2003-03-26) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Five men were stuck in a desert island. The island was plentifully supplied with coconuts, fortunately, and they spent the first day gathering the coconuts, heaping them in a great pile.

That night, one of the men was sleepless at the thought that everyone would fight over the coconuts at daybreak. So he arose, crept to the pile, and counted out the coconuts. Except for one coconut, it was possible to divide the pile into five equal portions. He gave the extra coconut to the monkey (who was the only other living being on the island besides those five men), buried his share of the coconuts, then went back to a sound sleep leaving the rest again in a pile.

Then another man got up and stole to the pile with the same object in mind. Again there was one coconut left over. The second man gave the spare coconut to the monkey, buried (what he thought was) his fair share, and went back to sleep, again leaving the remaining coconuts in one pile.

One by one, the remaining men got up and did the same and everytime the monkey got his share of one coconut.

In the morning, the men divided whatever coconuts remained into five equal piles, each taking his share and saying nothing about the night just past.

What is the minimum number of coconuts the five men assembled on the first day, if in the Final Division:

(a)There was again one coconut left over and the men (as usual) gave it to the monkey.

(b) There was no coconut left over for the monkey.

See The Solution Submitted by Ravi Raja    
Rating: 3.8571 (7 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
You don't wanna know... | Comment 12 of 41 |
Ravi,
First I figured out the recursive operation that needed to be performed by each man;

x-((x-1)/5) = next man's amount of coconuts.

Then I put that in Excel (is that a four letter word around here?), one column for each man. Finally, I checked the values in the last column to see if there was an integer that followed the (a) and (b) rules in the problem.

Where I went wrong was, although I knew every man had to start with the number of coconuts ending with either a "1" or a "6", I forgot to look at my "1"'s columns to see if (a) and (b) were satisified with fewer coconuts.


I guess if I had to come up with a formula it would just be something like x-((x-1)/5) = y where x is the number of original coconuts, and y is how many the next guy has to work with. Once you run through this 5 times, then can substitute values back in and solve it in terms of one variable. I don't have enough "yellow-stickys" for that right now :)
  Posted by jude on 2003-03-27 04:16:42
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