spyguy
Thanks for the explanation. It seems so very blatant and easy once it is explained. Does anyone have any help tips or tricks when you come across these on the gmat? I find that I lose all sense of rationalization and can't begin to take a step forward. It's like I am staring at a foreign language I know nothing about while stuck in cement that has dried.
I think you just need to get past the notation. I am sure you are capable of solving \(2^4 / 2^2\) – that's just a simple exponent rule.
So its probably the symbols and notation in this question that throws you.
When I see this, I just instantly think about this in functional notation. Get rid of a symbol you have never seen before (Ø), and put into something familiar. My thought process was this:
Ø is defined for all positive integers x and w by x Ø w \(= (2^x)/(2^w)\)
I see this as: \(f(x,w) = (2^x)/(2^w)\)
(3 Ø 1) Ø 3
Is now: \(f(f(3,1),3) = f((2^3)/(2^1),3) = f(4,3) = 2^4/2^3 = 2^1 = 2\)
Maybe this approach will help.