schumi_gmat wrote:@ Cubicle
for 0<x<1 for all the values in this range |x| <1 hence Suff
We have to prove lxl < 1 i.e -1<x<1
I agree that the equation is true for 0<x<1.
But how is it possible that it is sufficient to prove -1<x<1. Isnt it partially true?
Can you explain what I am doing wrong here?
You've misinterpreted the question.
You've read the question as "could x be every number that satisfies |x| < 1?"
However, the question is actually "is |x| < 1?"
In order for a statement to be sufficient, it has to give us a definite "yes" or definite "no" answer to the question.
From (2) we can derive 0<x<1. In other words, x must be a positive fraction.
Is the absolute value of every positive fraction less than 1? Definitely YES! Therefore, (2) is sufficient.
Let's look at a much simpler question to illustrate the conceptual error that you made:
Q: Is x greater than 0?
(1) x = 5
For this question, you probably wouldn't even think twice. If x=5, then it's definitely greater than 0... sufficient.
However, if we follow the line of thinking you employed for the original question, we'd say:
"5 doesn't satisfy every possible value that's greater than 0, therefore (1) isn't sufficient."