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A surprise exam (Posted on 2002-04-26) Difficulty: 3 of 5
A professor tells his class that he will give them a surprise examination sometime next week.

For our purposes, an examination is considered a "surprise" if on that day, the class is not 100% sure that they will get an examination. (If they only suspect it, the examination can still be a surprise.)

Having given the class this warning, is it still possible for the professor to give them a surprise examination next week? (Assume that he will not give them an exam if it will not be a surprise.)

See The Solution Submitted by levik    
Rating: 3.3684 (19 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re(4): not true | Comment 24 of 39 |
(In reply to re(3): not true by Gamer)

By "indirectly" do you mean "recursively"?

If you mean recursively, then yes. I did it recursively... (whether you believe it or not).

If you mean something else, I don't understand you.

Gamer, please be more precise in your comments.

And yes, some of what I restated is what others said earlier. I was trying to make more clear (to Bruno) what they had already said. Perhaps I didn't succeed to Bruno's or your satisfaction.
  Posted by SilverKnight on 2003-10-07 19:54:00

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