T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2002.1 | Answer to #1 | SSAG::LARY | Laughter & hope & a sock in the eye | Mon Oct 16 1995 02:33 | 22 |
| Lemme take the easy one...
>1. Find a pair of 2 six-digit numbers such that, if they are written down side
>by side to form a twelve-digit number, this number is divisible by the product
>of the two original numbers. Find all such pairs of six-digit numbers. (3 pts)
In other words, looking for a, b where:
(1) 99999 < a < 1000000
(2) 99999 < b < 1000000
(3) ab | 1000000*a+b
Now ab | x --> (a | x and b | x/a), so (3) --> b | 1000000+(b/a)
where, by (1), b > 99999 * (b/a) and, by (1) and (2), 0 < b/a < 10
so b = 1000000+(b/a) / K, where 1 < K < 1000010 / (999999*(b/a))
This is actually a very small search space because of the limit on b; only
a few small divisors K of 1000001 through 1000005 need be considered, and
1000006 through 1000009 can be eliminated immediately.
The only solution is when b/a = 2 and K=3, and is: b = 333334, a=166667.
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2002.2 | Confusion on #3 | SSAG::LARY | Laughter & hope & a sock in the eye | Mon Oct 16 1995 02:42 | 15 |
| >3. A club of 11 people has a committee. At every meeting of the committee a new
>committee is formed which differs by 1 person from its predecessor (either one
>new member is included or one member is removed). The committee must always
>have at least three members and, according to the club rules, the committee
>membership at any stage must differ from its membership at every previous
>stage. Is it possible that after some time all possible compositions of the
>committee will have already occurred? (6 pts)
Huh? I'm confused. This seems too easy for a 6-pointer. The committee
composition at any time is given by describing each club member as In or Out,
so there are less than 2^11 compositions and the answer is obviously Yes, with
most of the problem wording treated as a red herring. What am I missing?
(The exact upper bound on compositions is a little more interesting, it is no
more than 1981 but could be less, and could depend on the initial composition.)
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2002.3 | my guess | AUSSIE::GARSON | achtentachtig kacheltjes | Mon Oct 16 1995 06:58 | 10 |
| re .2
It's a little unclear. I haven't looked at this problem but ...
consider the different committees as nodes in a network where two nodes
are connected if they meet the condition for change of committee (i.e.
differ by 1 person) and ignoring all committees with less than three
members then the question asks whether there is a path through the
network visiting every node exactly once. By symmetry it should not
depend on the starting node.
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2002.4 | My interpretation of #3 | CHEFS::STRANGEWAYS | Andy Strangeways@REO DTN 830-3216 | Mon Oct 16 1995 07:05 | 19 |
| Yes, I read it that way the first time. Going back and looking for an
alternative reading that made more sense, I interpreted the last line
as meaning "Is it possible to pass through all permissible committees
(ie every subset with three or more members) following the "only one
change" rule? Or do you necessarily get stuck at some point where there
are valid committees that have not occurred, but these cannot be
reached without violating the change rule?
The question then becomes:
Can the set of all subsets of {1,2,...11} with three or more members be
ordered such that each element differs from its predecessor by exactly
one member?
On the face of it, it looks as though the answer should be a definite
"yes". I'll see if I can come up with an ordering.
Andy.
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2002.5 | plenty of choices | CHEFS::STRANGEWAYS | Andy Strangeways@REO DTN 830-3216 | Mon Oct 16 1995 07:30 | 27 |
| re .3: Notes collision!
Yes, that was the approach I was taking. Note that we need only a path,
not a circuit. If it's not a circuit then it could well depend on the
starting node, equivalent solutions would exist for all other nodes
with the same number of elements.
The nodes split into classes according to the number of elements. Each
of the C(11,n) nodes of class n connects to exactly (11-n) nodes of
class n+1 and n nodes of class n-1, with the obvious exception for n=3.
That's an awful lot of connections, which should make it quite easy. :)
I seem to remember a coding system for electromechanical A/D converters
where are wheel was marked out in 2^n sectors covered in conducting and
non-conducting bands such that every band was uniquely coded and
adjecent sectors differed in only one band. This ensured there were no
spurious values due to edge effects. If this coding exists for all n
(or at least, for n=11) then it solves the problem with the 3 member
constraint removed. (A committee of zero persons is very efficient!).
This gives us a solution with at most C(11,2) = 55 gaps where the
sequence dips down to committees of size 2 or less. (Actually
fewer since we need to get down to 1's and than means comming back via
anothe 2, so 2 2's sit in one gap). Perhaps these gaps could be
"stitched together" to complete the sequence?
Andy.
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2002.6 | Answer to #3 | JOBURG::BUCHANAN | | Mon Oct 16 1995 08:54 | 17 |
| There's no such Hamiltonian path through this bipartite graph.
If the nth committee has an even number of members, then the (n+1)th
has an odd number of members. So:
|Number of committees with an odd number of members|
- |Number of committees with an even number of members|
= -1,0 or +1.
Now if we were operating with the full set of 2^11 = 2048 committees,
then we would have no problem providing the Hamiltonian path. However,
the quorum restriction removes 1+55 = 56 even committees, and only 11
odd committees. So there's no possible path. Not even close.
Cheers,
Andrew.
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2002.7 | Gray code | WIBBIN::NOYCE | EV5 issues 4 instructions per meter | Mon Oct 16 1995 12:02 | 4 |
| > I seem to remember a coding system for electromechanical A/D converters
It's called Gray code, and exists for all 'n'. The GE 635 had instructions
to convert between Gray and binary for 36-bit numbers...
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2002.8 | Number 5 | IOSG::CARLIN | Dick Carlin IOSG, Reading, England | Mon Oct 16 1995 13:25 | 25 |
| For 1 <= i <= 101, sort the rectangles (a(i),b(i)) according to their
shorter (a) side.
We must be able to find two rectangles to fit, since there must be at least
one repetition in the a's, a(r) = a(r+1) say.
Let these two rectangles be (a(r),b(r)) and (a(r+1),b(r+1)). Assume we can
find no other rectangles that can be contained by the former or contain the
latter. The preceding rectangles must have b(i) > b(r) and the succeeding
ones must have b(i) < b(r+1). Again, pigeonholing tells us:
2(100 - b(r)) >= r - 1 (otherwise some b is repeated three times)
2(b(r) - a(101)) >= 100 - r (similarly, also a(i) <= b(i))
adding these we get 2(b(r) - b(r-1)) >= 2a(101) - 101
Pigeonholing overall tells us that the minimum a(101) is 51 (otherwise some
a is repeated three times).
So we get 2(b(r) - b(r-1)) >= 1 which contradicts our sorting. Therefore
there is a third rectangle.
Dick
Not very well explained but it is Monday.
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2002.9 | a different approach | JOBURG::BUCHANAN | | Mon Oct 16 1995 13:51 | 32 |
| Here's a slightly different approach to number 5.
Suppose that we have a set of rectangles.
If A lies in B, call this a *containment*.
Let rung_i be the set of all rectangles (x,y) x>y such that x+y = i, for
i=2,200.
Let I by the smallest i such that rung_i is not empty. Suppose make each
rectangle in rung_I longer by 1 (i.e.: x->x+1). We know that we haven't
introduced a containment. Why?
Well, let r be a rectangle in rung_i. r is bigger, so it can't fit in
any rectangle that it couldn't fit in before. r is only 1 element
longer, and by the definition of rung_I, any rectangle which r can now
contain, it could already be contained by before.
We can iterate the rung_I trick until we reach a point where I=101.
Similarly, we can reduce the width of every rectangle in rung_J, where
J is the largest i such that rung_i is non-empty. We can do this until
J = 101.
Therefore, if there is any set of rectangles, then there is a set of
rectangles with no more containments, with every rectangle lying in
rung_101. But rung_101 can contain at most 2*50 = 100 rectangles
without triple containment (A in B in C).
So if we have any set of 101 rectangles, then there must be a triple
containment.
Andrew.
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2002.10 | | AUSSIE::GARSON | achtentachtig kacheltjes | Tue Oct 17 1995 05:25 | 13 |
| re .5
> Yes, that was the approach I was taking. Note that we need only a path,
> not a circuit. If it's not a circuit then it could well depend on the
> starting node, equivalent solutions would exist for all other nodes
> with the same number of elements.
Oops, yes, correct. My statement that it does not depend on the
starting node was incorrect. It could perhaps have been said that it
depends on the starting node only in so far as it depends on the number of
members in the committee that corresponds to that node. However as Andrew
shows in his succinct manner, such a path does not exist (for any starting
node) anyway.
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2002.11 | Answer to #4 | JOBURG::BUCHANAN | | Tue Oct 17 1995 06:15 | 17 |
| Colour the regions black and white, so that no two adjacent regions
share the same colour.
For each region, count the number of points which are incident to that
region, p. If the region is black, label the region p, else label it
-p.
Each region is incident to at least 1 and at most N points, so the
label is within the required bounds.
Consider a point. To each side of any line through it, it will
contribute +1+(-1)=0. To one side of any line which does not pass
through it, it will contribute +1+(-1)+1+(-1) = 0. Therefore the sum of
all the labels to either side of a line is 0.
Cheers,
Andrew.
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2002.12 | | AUSSIE::GARSON | achtentachtig kacheltjes | Wed Oct 18 1995 19:47 | 7 |
| re .11
My incomplete proof was heading along similar lines except that I
didn't go for colouring but rather just that the signs alternate. It is
necessary to show that such a colouring/alternation is always possible.
It seemed to me that induction on the number of lines is sufficient to
show this - or is there some more obvious demonstration of this?
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2002.13 | colouring seemed more visual | JOBURG::BUCHANAN | | Thu Oct 19 1995 05:50 | 9 |
| re .12
Pick a region, r. Colour each other region, s, black/white if there is a
walk of even/odd length ending in s. Colouring is well-defined, else
there is a circuit (r->r) of odd length. But any circuit must cross
each line an even number of time so the total length is even.
Contradiction.
Andy
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