Last visit was: 25 Apr 2024, 04:41 It is currently 25 Apr 2024, 04:41

Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
SORT BY:
Date
Tags:
Show Tags
Hide Tags
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 29 Dec 2011
Posts: 2
Own Kudos [?]: 240 [231]
Given Kudos: 6
Concentration: Finance
Schools: Yale '14 (II)
GMAT 1: 710 Q48 V38
GMAT 2: 720 Q49 V40
GPA: 3.3
Send PM
Most Helpful Reply
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Posts: 92912
Own Kudos [?]: 618920 [146]
Given Kudos: 81595
Send PM
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 17 Nov 2011
Status:Employed
Posts: 67
Own Kudos [?]: 433 [30]
Given Kudos: 10
Location: Pakistan
Concentration: International Business, Marketing
GMAT 1: 720 Q49 V40
GPA: 3.2
WE:Business Development (Internet and New Media)
Send PM
General Discussion
User avatar
Senior Manager
Senior Manager
Joined: 13 Aug 2012
Posts: 336
Own Kudos [?]: 1821 [8]
Given Kudos: 11
Concentration: Marketing, Finance
GPA: 3.23
Send PM
On a number line the distance between x and y is greater than th [#permalink]
6
Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Best technique is to draw and visualize their positions in the numberline...

1. xyz < 0
Try x and y and z as all negative...
<---(z)---x--(z)---y-----0------------>

Just this scenario is already giving us two possibilities...
INSUFFICIENT

2. xy < 0
This means x and y has opposite signs...

<----(z)---x--(z)--0-------y------>

Just this scenario is already giving us two possibilities...
INSUFFICIENT

Now, let us combine...
If x and y has opposite signs then for xyz to be negative z must be positive...

scenario 1: <---------x-----0-(z)-------y--------------> YES z is in between
scenario 2: <---------y-----0-----(z)-------x------(z)-------> NO z is not in between

STILL INSUFFICIENT

Answer: E
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 03 Dec 2012
Posts: 146
Own Kudos [?]: 831 [0]
Given Kudos: 291
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Bunuel, I have a question. Among the 4 cases why are C & D a "no case".
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Posts: 92912
Own Kudos [?]: 618920 [2]
Given Kudos: 81595
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
2
Kudos
Expert Reply
mohnish104 wrote:
Bunuel, I have a question. Among the 4 cases why are C & D a "no case".


Because in cases C and D z does not lie between x and y. Remember that the questions asks whether z lies between x and y on a number line.
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 07 Aug 2011
Posts: 46
Own Kudos [?]: 60 [0]
Given Kudos: 1
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, Finance
GPA: 3.87
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Bunuel, couldn't it also be possible that the variables are arranged so x is between z and y? For example z->x->y, instead of only x->y->z? It's kind of an incidental point because I got it right, but I want to make sure I am figuring it up the proper way.

Also, when the statements xyz or xy, is that to say how the numbers are located with reference to zero, or is it saying to multiply the numbers?
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Posts: 92912
Own Kudos [?]: 618920 [0]
Given Kudos: 81595
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Expert Reply
Stoneface wrote:
Bunuel, couldn't it also be possible that the variables are arranged so x is between z and y? For example z->x->y, instead of only x->y->z? It's kind of an incidental point because I got it right, but I want to make sure I am figuring it up the proper way.

Also, when the statements xyz or xy, is that to say how the numbers are located with reference to zero, or is it saying to multiply the numbers?


We know that the distance between x and y is greater than the distance between x and z. This can happen in 4 ways, shown in my post. You can see there that x CAN be between z and y in cases C and D.

As for xyz it means x*y*z.
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 08 Feb 2016
Posts: 31
Own Kudos [?]: 173 [2]
Given Kudos: 14
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
2
Bookmarks
Using (I) and (II) alone, it is easy to figure that each statement alone is not sufficient.

Combining (I) and (II), we have xyz < 0 and xy < 0, this implies that z is positive
(if z is negative then xyz is > 0 [since xy < 0 as per (II)] and xyz > 0 violates (I). Hence z cannot be negative).
When combining (I) and (II) we can take two cases
x is -ve or y is -ve [both cannot have the same sign as this violates (II)].

We will have the below 3 cases for x is -ve and y is -ve. No single solution exists and hence both together not sufficient. Answer is E.

Thanks
Attachments

z between x and y.jpg
z between x and y.jpg [ 47.42 KiB | Viewed 85070 times ]

Director
Director
Joined: 26 Oct 2016
Posts: 510
Own Kudos [?]: 3379 [5]
Given Kudos: 877
Location: United States
Concentration: Marketing, International Business
Schools: HBS '19
GMAT 1: 770 Q51 V44
GPA: 4
WE:Education (Education)
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
3
Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Scenario A ) where XYZ < 0.

2 positives 1 negative
3 negatives.

For three negatives on the number the order can be z, x, y, 0...or x, z, y, 0.

So A is insufficient.

Scenario B) hwere XY < 0.

One negative one positive. So the order can go. x 0 z y...or z x 0 y. So B is insufficient.

Scenario A+B.

If X and Y are both of oppositie signs (XY<0)..then Z has to be postive in order for XYZ < 0.

So One Negative and two positives.

Order can be.....x 0 z y...or y 0 x z.

Thus E.
Intern
Intern
Joined: 28 Dec 2010
Posts: 19
Own Kudos [?]: 230 [0]
Given Kudos: 337
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Here is another way to look at the problem.

According to the question, the distance on x and y is greater than x and z, since we have x as the reference point for calculating the distance.

We can only have two cases.

Case 1 - When x is in the middle of y and z

Case 2 - When x is at the extreme end i.e. on one side.

Statement 1 and Statement 2 doesn't provide us the exact values of x,y,z, therefore, Answer is E
Attachments

numberline_11.JPG
numberline_11.JPG [ 26.34 KiB | Viewed 63313 times ]

Target Test Prep Representative
Joined: 14 Oct 2015
Status:Founder & CEO
Affiliations: Target Test Prep
Posts: 18756
Own Kudos [?]: 22050 [2]
Given Kudos: 283
Location: United States (CA)
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater [#permalink]
2
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
uvs_mba wrote:
On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the distance between x and z. Does z lie between x and y on the number line?

(1) xyz<0
(2) xy< 0


We are given that on the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the distance between x and z. We need to determine whether z lies between x and y on the number line.

Statement One Alone:

xyz < 0

Using the information in statement one, we have two possible cases:

Case 1: Exactly one variable (either x, y, or z) is negative

Case 2: All three variables are negative.

Even with this information, we cannot determine whether z lies between x and y.

For example, for Case 1, if x = -1, y = 2, and z = 1, then z falls between x and y. However, for Case 2, if x = 1, y = 4, and z = -1, then z does not fall between x and y. Statement one alone is not sufficient. We can eliminate answer choices A and D.

Statement Two Alone:

xy < 0

Using the information from statement two, we know that exactly one of the values x or y is negative and the other is positive. However, without knowing anything about z, we cannot determine whether z falls between x and y. Statement two alone is not sufficient. We can eliminate answer choice B.

Statements One and Two Together:

From the information in statements one and two, we know that z must be positive and exactly one of the values x or y is negative. However, we still we cannot determine whether z falls between x and y or outside x and y.

For example, if x = -1, y = 2, and z = 1, then z falls between x and y. However, if x = 1, y = -2, and z = 2, then z does not fall between x and y. The two statements together are still not sufficient.

Answer: E
GMAT Club Legend
GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Dec 2014
Status:GMAT Assassin/Co-Founder
Affiliations: EMPOWERgmat
Posts: 21846
Own Kudos [?]: 11665 [0]
Given Kudos: 450
Location: United States (CA)
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V49
GRE 1: Q170 V170
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater [#permalink]
Expert Reply
Hi All,

We're told that, on a number line, the distance between X and Y is GREATER than the distance between X and Z. We're asked if Z is BETWEEN X and Y on the number line. This is a YES/NO question. This question can be solved in a number of different ways. You can use a combination of TESTing VALUES and Number Properties to get to the solution:

Fact 1: (X)(Y)(Z) < 0

This tells us that the three variables are either all negative OR 1 negative and 2 positives.

IF...
X = 1
Y = -2
Z = 2
Then the answer to the question is NO.

IF...
X = 2
Y = -2
Z = 1
Then the answer to the question is YES.
Fact 1 is INSUFFICIENT

Fact 2: (X)(Y) < 0

This tells us that one variable is positive and the other is negative. Unfortunately it tells us NOTHING about Z. As it stands though, the TESTs that I did in Fact 1 fit Fact 2 as well....

IF...
X = 1
Y = -2
Z = 2
Then the answer to the question is NO.

IF...
X = 2
Y = -2
Z = 1
Then the answer to the question is YES.
Fact 2 is INSUFFICIENT

Combined, we already have two TESTs that fit BOTH Facts and produce different answers (a NO and a YES), so there's no more work needed.
Combined, INSUFFICIENT

Final Answer:

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
Current Student
Joined: 19 Jan 2018
Posts: 106
Own Kudos [?]: 115 [0]
Given Kudos: 3160
Send PM
On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
jj97cornell wrote:
On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the distance between x and z. Does z lie between x and y on the number line?

(1) xyz < 0
(2) xy < 0



From the information, we know that |x-y|>|x-z|, now we need to determine whether z is between x and y.

(1) xyz < 0
This tells us that all 3 of the values are negative (which could mean that z is in between x and y or not) or z is negative and x and y are positive
Insufficient

(2) xy < 0
This tells us that x and y have opposite signs, but tells nothing about z
Insufficient

1+2
Because we know that either x or y has to be negative (from statement 2), that means Z HAS to be negative. But Z could be greater than X (which would give a yes), or Z could be is less than X (which would give a no)

Both Statements are insufficient.
Answer is E
Senior Manager
Senior Manager
Joined: 14 Jul 2019
Status:Student
Posts: 478
Own Kudos [?]: 369 [0]
Given Kudos: 52
Location: United States
Concentration: Accounting, Finance
GMAT 1: 650 Q45 V35
GPA: 3.9
WE:Education (Accounting)
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
jj97cornell wrote:
On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the distance between x and z. Does z lie between x and y on the number line?

(1) xyz < 0
(2) xy < 0


(1) xyz < 0 , atleast one or all of the 3 is negative.Too broad to define. it can be like (x = -4, z = -1, y = -10) (x = 2, y = 6, z =-1)(z is the rightmost and leftmost respectively in the number line). or ( x= 6, y = -1, z = 1)(here z is in the middle of x and y). Not sufficient.

(2) xy < 0. either x or y has to be negative. No information about z. Not sufficient.

Together, lets take x = 5, y = -2, z = 6 ( z is the rightmost), or x = -8, y = 2 and z = -7 (z in the middle). so Not sufficient.

E is the answer.
Manager
Manager
Joined: 24 Feb 2017
Status:wake up with a purpose
Posts: 173
Own Kudos [?]: 386 [0]
Given Kudos: 114
Location: Bangladesh
Concentration: Accounting, Entrepreneurship
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
On the number line the distance bet x & y is greater than the distance between x & z.
^^ given this statement, the number line can appear in one of exactly four ways:

case 1:--------------------x------z-------y---------
case 2: -------------z------x--------------y---------
case 3: -----y--------------x------z-----------------
case 4: -----y------z-------x------------------------

cases 1 and 4 are "yes" to the question; cases 2 and 3 are "no". since the GOAL is to TRY FOR "INSUFFICIENT" (as in just about any non-algebraic DS problem), you should try to get one instance of case 1 or 4, and one instance of case 2 or 3.

(1) xyz<0
^^ you can make any of the four cases with 3 negative numbers, so this statement is insufficient (you don't even have to consider the cases in which some of them are positive).
e.g.
x = -3, z = -2, y = -1 --> case 1 ("yes" to the question)
z = -4, x = -3, y = -1 --> case 2 ("no" to the question)

(2) xy<0
^^ again, easy to get any of the three cases -- x and y just have to be one positive and one negative, and z can be, well, anything at all.
e.g.
x = -2, z = 1, y = 2 --> case 1 ("yes" to the question)
z = -3, x = -2, y = 2 --> case 2 ("no" to the question)

together:
if you have both statements, then you know:
x and y are one positive, one negative;
z is positive.
you can still get both answers:
x = -2, z = 1, y = 2 --> case 1 ("yes" to the question)
y = -2, x = 2, z = 3 --> case 2 ("no" to the question)
still insufficient.

answer = (e)
Director
Director
Joined: 14 Jul 2010
Status:No dream is too large, no dreamer is too small
Posts: 972
Own Kudos [?]: 4928 [0]
Given Kudos: 690
Concentration: Accounting
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Top Contributor
jj97cornell wrote:
On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the distance between x and z. Does z lie between x and y on the number line?

(1) xyz < 0
(2) xy < 0



(1)Option (a) ----z---0-x-------------y--- = xyz<0; Z IS OUTSIDE X AND Y
Option (b) ------x--0--z-----------y---- =xyz<0; Z IS IN BETWEEN X AND Y
Option (c) ------x---z--------y----0---- =xyz<0; Z IS IN BETWEEN X AND Y
Option (d)-------z---x--------y----0---- =xyz<0; Z IS OUTSIDE X AND Y

INSUFFICIENT

(2) Option (A) ------x--------0-------y-= xy<0; Z could be anywhere on the number line. INSUFFICIENT

Using both the information.
No additional information is available to give a confirm point for Z.

Ans. E.
Senior Manager
Senior Manager
Joined: 19 Nov 2017
Posts: 300
Own Kudos [?]: 306 [0]
Given Kudos: 50
Location: India
GMAT 1: 710 Q49 V38
GPA: 3.25
WE:Account Management (Advertising and PR)
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Bunuel

Can I say that because the question talks about only distance/magnitude and not signs and the options talk about only signs and not distance the answer would be E?
Manager
Manager
Joined: 22 Nov 2019
Posts: 232
Own Kudos [?]: 99 [0]
Given Kudos: 197
GPA: 4
Send PM
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Bunuel

Source: Gmat-Prep
GMAT Club Bot
Re: On the number line, the distance between x and y is greater than the [#permalink]
Moderator:
Math Expert
92912 posts

Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group | Emoji artwork provided by EmojiOne