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Hehe. Go on, robert, you can explain. I'm struggling a bit for time today. Maybe then we can share the point.
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
Well done, Robert. I think your proof is even rather elegant! So. you deserve the point.
I also let you use the right angle and Pythagoras (although DG might have had to prove those parts as well )
Originally Posted by Robert602
I'm going to assume I can say that that triangle is right angled (at C) without proving it, as it's just high school geometry.
We know that:
a^2 + b^2 = 100 (pythagoras)
0.5ab = 11 (area of the triangle) -> 2ab=44
One point for Robert (which catapults him into 3rd place) and one for davis-greatest (in accord with the special rule; we will allow him until he'll get dangerous)
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
Charlie has been a bit busy, teaching Oliver, Gordon and me about numbers that aren't whole numbers (did you know that there exist "non-integers"?) and about reciprocals. Apparently, the reciprocal of a number is "one divided by that number". So, the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 = one half, and the reciprocal of 10 is 0.1. Oliver and Gordon are now experts, and I'm beginning to understand them too.
Now that we know about non-integers, we can do calculations with them.
So, to test us, Charlie comes up with a special number, which he calls Special Number. He tells me the Special Number, and he tells Gordon the square of the Special Number, and tells Oliver the cube of the Special Number.
Then, I have to add my number to its reciprocal. I get a whole number, with more than one digit.
Gordon has to add his number to its reciprocal. He also gets a whole number, with the same number of digits as my answer.
Oliver also has to add his number to its reciprocal. Without using a calculator or computer, what answer did Oliver get?
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
970, 980ish?
I feel a bit silly, the question sounded so easy initially...
Charlie says yes-ish, but to give the point he wants a single exact answer.
"If anybody can knock these three balls in, this man can." David Taylor, 11 January 1982, as Steve Davis prepared to pot the blue, in making the first 147 break on television.
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