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Cows, horses and dogs (Posted on 2008-10-20) Difficulty: 2 of 5
I have cows, horses and dogs, a different prime number of each. If I multiply the number of cows (c) by the total of cows and horses (c+h), the product is 120 more than the number of dogs (d), that is: c*(c+h) = 120 + d.

How many of each do I have?

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

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
re: Odds are | Comment 4 of 13 |
(In reply to Odds are by ed bottemiller)

Nice explanation ed!  I too got the same result upon realizing the special role of '2' here, and yes, 11 and 13 do happen to be consecutive primes separated by 2.  Sorry to nit-pick though, but unless I'm missing something here (entirely possible this wet and dreary day:(, how can you say that we're actually looking for (c+2), or (prime+2), to be the second in a 'prime pair', or even a prime number at all?  While that happens to be the case here once you hit on the actual solution, couldn't (c+2) really have just been any number, prime or otherwise, until you rule out the possibilities?  In other words, very few primes + 2 necessarily = another prime!     
  Posted by rod hines on 2008-10-20 15:14:16

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