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A quaint incongruent integral partitioning conundrum (Posted on 2006-12-20) Difficulty: 3 of 5
What is the maximum number of rectangles into which a 17x24-rectangle can be partitioned, when all rectangles must be incongruent and have integer side lengths?

See The Solution Submitted by JLo    
Rating: 4.0000 (1 votes)

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Ceiling | Comment 1 of 4
The ceiling on the number of incongruent integral length rectangles is found by choosing rectangles with minimal area whose areas sum to 408 (17*24). At most 35 incongruent rectangles achieve this goal. Rectangles of height 1 and width 1 to 20. Rectangles of height 2 and width 2 to 10. Rectangles of height 3 and width 3 to 6. And rectangles of height 4 and width 4 and 5. It remains to be shown that these such rectangles can be tescalated to form a 17x24 rectangle...

  Posted by Eric on 2006-12-20 15:34:14
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