- krithika1993
- Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
- Posts: 16
- Joined: Sat Jul 23, 2016 4:38 am
Hi there,
I was trying some practice questions online when I came across 2 tough ones.
QUESTION 1
1. Is y = 3?
(1) (y - 3)(x - 4) = 0
(2) (x - 4) = 0
Correct Answer: (E).
I'm not sure how they determined the answer to be E. I think it should be A because in statement 1, if each factor is set equal to 0, solving for y in the first factor gives you 3. Solving for x gives you 4 (but this is irrelevant to the question being asked).
QUESTION 2
If p is a prime number greater than 2, what is the value of p?
(1) There are a total of 100 prime numbers between 1 and p+1
(2) There are a total of p prime numbers between 1 and 3912
Correct Answer: (D).
I didn't really know where to begin with this question. I tend to get overwhelmed/intimidated by questions that provide very large numbers of values between 1 value and the other (i.e. 100 prime numbers between 1 and p+1). Would there be an efficient approach that I can use for all such questions (whether or not I am dealing with prime/non prime #s)?
Please let me know where I'm misinterpreting the information/how I could improve on such "solve for this variable" data sufficiency problems.
Thank you very much!
Krithika
I was trying some practice questions online when I came across 2 tough ones.
QUESTION 1
1. Is y = 3?
(1) (y - 3)(x - 4) = 0
(2) (x - 4) = 0
Correct Answer: (E).
I'm not sure how they determined the answer to be E. I think it should be A because in statement 1, if each factor is set equal to 0, solving for y in the first factor gives you 3. Solving for x gives you 4 (but this is irrelevant to the question being asked).
QUESTION 2
If p is a prime number greater than 2, what is the value of p?
(1) There are a total of 100 prime numbers between 1 and p+1
(2) There are a total of p prime numbers between 1 and 3912
Correct Answer: (D).
I didn't really know where to begin with this question. I tend to get overwhelmed/intimidated by questions that provide very large numbers of values between 1 value and the other (i.e. 100 prime numbers between 1 and p+1). Would there be an efficient approach that I can use for all such questions (whether or not I am dealing with prime/non prime #s)?
Please let me know where I'm misinterpreting the information/how I could improve on such "solve for this variable" data sufficiency problems.
Thank you very much!
Krithika


















