A rectangle is defined to be "silver" if and only

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A rectangle is defined to be "silver" if and only the ratio of its length to its width is 2 to 1. If rectangle S is silver, is rectangle R silver?

(1) R has the same area as S.
(2) The ratio of one side of R to one side of S is 2 to 1.

The OA is E.

I'm confused by this DS question, can anyone assist me with it, please? I appreciate your help. Thanks!
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by Jay@ManhattanReview » Wed Jun 13, 2018 10:18 pm

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BTGmoderatorLU wrote:A rectangle is defined to be "silver" if and only the ratio of its length to its width is 2 to 1. If rectangle S is silver, is rectangle R silver?

(1) R has the same area as S.
(2) The ratio of one side of R to one side of S is 2 to 1.

The OA is E.

I'm confused by this DS question, can anyone assist me with it, please? I appreciate your help. Thanks!
We have a special rectangle named S, called Silver; Silver is such that the ratio of its length to its width is 2 to 1.

We have to find out whether rectangle R is also a Silver. Or, we have to determine whether the ratio of its length to its width is 2 to 1.

Let's take each statement one by one.

(1) R has the same area as S.

Case 1:

Say the width of rectangle S as well as R = b, and their length = 2b, then their area = 2b^2. The answer is Yes.

Case 2:

Say the width of R = b/2, and its length = 4b, then its area = 2b^2. The ratio of length to width is 8 is to 1 ≠ 2 is to 1. The answer is No. No unique answer. Insufficient.

(2) The ratio of one side of R to one side of S is 2 to 1.

Case 1:

Say the width of rectangle S = b, and its length = 2b; and the width of rectangle R = 2b, and its length = 4b. The ratio of length to width is 2 is to 1. The answer is Yes.

Case 2:

Say the width of rectangle S = b, and its length = 2b; and the width of rectangle R = 2b, and its length = 2b. The ratio of length to width is 1 is to 1 ≠ 2 is to 1. The answer is No. No unique answer. Insufficient.

(1) and (2) together

Case 1:

Say the width of rectangle S = b, and its length = 2b => Area = 2b^2; and the width of rectangle R = 2b, and its length = b. The ratio of width to length is 2 is to 1. The answer is Yes. Insufficient.

Case 2:

Say the width of rectangle S = b, and its length = 2b => Area = 2b^2; and the width of rectangle R = b/2, and its length = 4b => Area = 2b^2. The ratio of length to width is 8 is to 1 ≠ 2 is to 1. The answer is No. No unique answer. Insufficient.

The correct answer: E

Hope this helps!

-Jay
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