Quote:
*Sarthak20 writes:*
> That’s because the removal of geometry was more of a marketing message... there is still geometric concepts being tested on the GMAT including the concepts of volume and the concept of area at least for a rectangle. A better messaging would be that pure geometric formulas are not tested and the scope of geometry is much smaller... but you are correct, the Pythagorean theorem is still an occasional visitor even on the data insights questions... there’s a famous one with a bad solution...
> Fun
Didn’t see Geometry related questions in the OG or official mocks tho (might be wrong, please correct me if it is the case). Do you suggest that we should brush up on some formulas for DI and QA just in case if an indirect applicability of Geometry turns up on the main exam?
GMAT will always give you enough info when they provide any question which is out of common sense
Even if they ask Pythagoras related concept. We know that it's not common concept so it will give relevant background.
What's common are knowledge of slopes, mid point theorem, distance of a point from other point or line... for these there can be direct questions