A certain toy store sold 20 toys yesterday, each of which was either a $40 toy or a $20 toy. How many $20 toys did the t

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A certain toy store sold 20 toys yesterday, each of which was either a $40 toy or a $20 toy. How many $20 toys did the toy store sell?

1) The average price of the toys sold yesterday was $35.
(2) The total price of the 20 toys sold yesterday was between $650 and $750.

Answer: A
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Source: — Data Sufficiency |

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BTGModeratorVI wrote:
Wed Oct 07, 2020 7:14 am
A certain toy store sold 20 toys yesterday, each of which was either a $40 toy or a $20 toy. How many $20 toys did the toy store sell?

1) The average price of the toys sold yesterday was $35.
(2) The total price of the 20 toys sold yesterday was between $650 and $750.

Answer: A
Source: GMAT hacks
Given: A certain toy store sold 20 toys yesterday, each of which was either a $40 toy or a $20 toy.
Let C = NUMBER of $20 toys sold (C for cheap)
Let E = NUMBER of $40 toys sold (E for expensive)
Since 20 toys were sold, we can write: C + E = 20

Target question: How many $20 toys did the toy store sell?
In other words, our goal is to determine the value of C

Statement 1: The average price of the toys sold yesterday was $35
In other words, (total revenue from the toys)/20 = $35
How do we determine total revenue?
Well, revenue from the $20 toys = 20C, and revenue from the $40 toys = 40E

So, we can write: (20C + 40E)/20 = 35
Multiply both sides by 20 to get: 20C + 40E = 700

We now have a system of two equations:
C + E = 20
20C + 40E = 70

Since we COULD solve this system for C, we COULD determine the number of $20 toys sold.
Since we COULD answer the target question with certainty, statement 1 is SUFFICIENT

Statement 2: The total price of the 20 toys sold yesterday was between $650 and $750
This statement does not feel sufficient, so let's test some values.
Case a: the store sold 5 $20 toys and 15 $40 toys. This yields a total revenue of $700. In this case, the store sold 5 $20 toys
Case b: the store sold 6 $20 toys and 14 $40 toys. This yields a total revenue of $680. In this case, the store sold 6 $20 toys
Since we cannot answer the target question with certainty, statement 2 is NOT SUFFICIENT

Answer: A
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Let the $20 toys = x and $40 toy = y
Total toys sold = x + y = 20
Target question => How many $20 toys did the toy store sell
Statement 1: The average price of the toys sold yesterday was $35.
$$i.e\ \frac{income\ from\ x\ and\ y}{20}=\text{35}$$
Where income from x and y toys = 20x + 40y
$$\frac{20x+40y}{20}=\text{35}$$
$$20x+40y=35\cdot20=700\ \ \ \ ---eqn\ \left(1\right)$$
From question stem, x+y=20 - - - eqn (2)
x = 20 - y
20 (20-y) + 40y = 700
400 - 20y + 40y = 700
20y = 700 - 400 = 300
y = 300 / 20 = 15 toys
Therefore, Statement 1 is SUFFICIENT.

Statement 2: The total price of the 20 toys sold yesterday was between $650 and $750.
The exact value for total income from $x and $y was not given. Hence, y cannot be evaluated with the information provided. So, therefore, statement 2 is NOT SUFFICIENT.

Since only statement 1 is SUFFICIENT, the correct answer choice is option A.