Equal functions

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by Brent@GMATPrepNow » Fri Apr 24, 2015 11:54 pm
Is √[(x - 3)²] = 3 - x ?

1. x is not equal to 3
2. -x|x| > 0
Target question: Is √[(x - 3)²] = 3 - x ?

This question is a great candidate for rephrasing the target question.
Aside: We have a free video with tips on rephrasing the target question: https://www.gmatprepnow.com/module/gmat- ... cy?id=1100

To begin, notice that we have two nice rules:
- If k > 0, then √(k²) = k
- If k < 0, then √(k²) = -k


Now observe that (3-x) = -(x-3)

Given the above information, under what conditions will √[(x-3)²] = 3-x?
In other words, under what conditions will √[(x-3)²] = -(x-3)?
This will occur IF x-3 is NEGATIVE.

So, we can now rephrase the target question as: Is (x-3) negative?
Or we can write: Is x-3 < 0?

. . . or better yet: Is x < 3?

Now that we've REPHRASED the target question in much simpler terms, we can check the statements.

Statement 1: x not equal to 3
This does not give us a definitive answer to the REPHRASED target question (Is x < 3? )
As such, statement 1 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: -x|x| > 0
First notice that this implies that x does not equal zero.
Next, notice that, if x does not equal zero, then |x| will always be positive.
So, -x|x| > 0 is the same as saying (-x)(positive) > 0
In other words, the product (-x)(positive) results in a positive number.
This tells us that (-x) must be positive, which means x must be negative.
If x is negative, then x is definitely less than 3.
Since we can answer the REPHRASED target question with certainty, statement 2 is SUFFICIENT

Answer = B

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by GMATGuruNY » Sat Apr 25, 2015 2:59 am
Is √(x-3)² = 3-x?

1) x ≠ 3
2) -x|x| > 0
Be definition:
√(x²) = |x|.
|a-b| is the DISTANCE between a and b.

Question stem, rephrased: Is |x-3| = 3-x?
In other words:
Is the DISTANCE between x and 3 equal to the DIFFERENCE between 3 and x?

A DIFFERENCE can be negative, 0, or positive.
A DISTANCE must be greater than or equal to 0.
For the DIFFERENCE between two values to be equal to the DISTANCE between the two values, the DIFFERENCE -- like the DISTANCE -- must be greater than or equal to 0:
3-x≥0
x≤3.
Thus, |x-3| = 3-x as long as x≤3.

Question stem, rephrased: Is x≤3?

Statement 1: x ≠ 3.
Here, it is possible that x<3 or that x>3.
INSUFFICIENT.

Statement 2: -x|x| > 0 .
Thus, the left-hand side must be (+)(+) or (-)(-).
Since |x| cannot be negative, both factors on the left-hand side must be POSITIVE.
Thus:
-x>0
x<0.
Since x<0, we know that x≤3.
SUFFICIENT.

The correct answer is B.
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by [email protected] » Sat Apr 25, 2015 10:48 am
Hi binaras,

This DS question is built around some subtle Number Property rules. You can TEST VALUES to prove whether a pattern exists (or not) and get to the correct answer.

We're asked if Root[(X-3)^2] = 3 - X. This is a YES/NO question.

Before dealing with the two Facts, notice how the "left side" of the question could be positive or 0. However, the "right side" could be positive, NEGATIVE or 0. That's a pattern that we can take advantage of....

Fact 1: X is not equal to 3

IF....
X = 2
Root[(2-3)^2] = Root[1] = 1
3-2 = 1
1 = 1 and the answer to the question is YES

IF....
X = 4
Root[(4-3)^2] = 1
3-4 = -1
1 is NOT = -1 and the answer to the question is NO
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT

Fact 2: -X|X| > 0

This tells us that X MUST be NEGATIVE. If you can spot what this pattern means in regards to the given question, then you can stop working. If not, then you should come up with a couple of examples to PROVE what the pattern is...

IF....
X = -1
Root[(-1 -3)^2] = Root[16] = 4
3 - (-1) = 4
4 = 4 and the answer to the question is YES

IF....
X = -2
Root[(-2 -3)^2] = Root[25] = 5
3 - (-2) = 5
5 = 5 and the answer to the question is YES

IF....
X = -3
Root[(-3 -3)^2] = Root[36] = 6
3 - (-3) = 6
6 = 6 and the answer to the question is YES

This pattern will continue no matter what negative value you TEST for X. The answer to the question is ALWAYS YES.
Fact 2 is SUFFICIENT

Final Answer: B

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