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Re: Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
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1+2+3=6 (1236)
Arranging 1,2,3 so six combinations.

1+2+4=7 (1247) arranging 1,2,4 six combinations

1+2+5 = 8 (1258) again 6 combinations

1+2+6 = 9 (1269) again 6 combinations

1+3+4 =8 (1348) ; 6 combinations

1+3+5 =9 (1359) ; 6 combinations

2+3+4 =9 (2349); 6 combinations

Hence , total 7 × 6 = 42 combinations of such 4 digit nos.


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Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
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if d is 3 abc will have to be (111)- >> not possible as number are distinct
if d is 4 abc will have to be 112 or some other combination with 0 -->> Both not possible as neither 0 not repetition is allowed


Like this if we see unique combinations are possible only when d is
6,7,8,9


when d = 6 abc could be (123) -> can be arranged in 3! ways so total 6 ways
when d is 7 abc could be (124) -> can be arranged in 3! ways so total 6 ways
when d is 8 abc could be
(125) -> can be arranged in 3! ways so total 6 ways
(134)-> can be arranged in 3! ways so total 6 ways
when d is 9 abc could be
126 -> arranged in 3! ways = 6 ways
135 -> arranged in 3! ways = 6 ways
234 -> arranged in 3! ways = 6 ways


If we sum all these we get 42 combinations in total
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Re: Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
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mikemcgarry wrote:
Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zero. How many four-digits numbers abcd exist such that the four digits are all distinct and such that
a + b + c = d?

(A) 6
(B) 7
(C) 24
(D) 36
(E) 42


This is the first of a set of 15 challenging math questions. To see the whole set, as well as the OE for this question, see:
Challenging GMAT Math Practice Questions

Mike :-)


Focus on first 3 digits. The last digit will automatically be the sum of first 3.
Since all digits are distinct, the smallest sum of first 3 will be 1 + 2 + 3 = 6.
Since their sum must be a digit, it cannot be more than 9.

The possible combinations with 1 and 2 are:
1, 2, 3
1, 2, 4
1, 2, 5
1, 2, 6 (sum = 9)

The possible combinations with 1 and 3 are:
1, 3, 4
1, 3, 5 (sum = )

There are no possible combinations with 1 and 4 (or higher) since 1, 4, 5 will give 10 as last digit which is not possible.

The possible combinations with 2 and 3 are:
2, 3, 4 (already sum is 9)

Hence there are 7 combinations each of which can be arranged in 3! ways (since each arrangement is a different number)
Total such numbers = 7 * 3! = 42

Answer (E)
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Re: Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
dnalost wrote:
mikemcgarry wrote:
Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zero. How many four-digits numbers abcd exist such that the four digits are all distinct and such that
a + b + c = d?

(A) 6
(B) 7
(C) 24
(D) 36
(E) 42


This is the first of a set of 15 challenging math questions. To see the whole set, as well as the OE for this question, see:
Challenging GMAT Math Practice Questions

Mike :-)

There are 7 combinations:
abcd
1236
2349
1349
1348
1247
1258
1269
Each can be rearranged in 6 ways. Total 6*7 = 42 .
C.

dnalost I am only getting ways. So total of 36 ways. I guess your one 1349 is not correct one
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Re: Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
Could someone help explain this to me, I'm getting 12. The way I thought about it was finding the smallest value for D possible first given a,b,and c have to be unique. This would mean D=1+2+3; D=6.

You can arrange the 1,2,and 3 six different ways (6!) so that's six cases where D=6.

The next smallest value for D is 9 (2+3+4). You can arrange the 2,3,and 4 six ways again so you are at 12 numbers.
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Re: Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
Is there any way to solve it without having to list the possible digits?
For sum =6 and 7, we have 1 combination (and its arrangements), for sum= 8 we have 2 and for sum=9 we have 3.
Is that a rule to predict the number of combinations for each sum, so we can just multiply them by their arrangements of 3!, without having to figure out which they are?
mikemcgarry
Bunuel
GMAT Club Bot
Re: Let abcd be a general four-digit number and all the digits are non-zer [#permalink]
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