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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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One important concept: Since we are talking about the ENCLOSING, we will bother about the PERIMETER.
So, the same length of rope/fencing will be used as perimeters of SQUARE and the rectangle.
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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St-1: 256 can be factorized many ways. So, Not sufficient

St-2:
In case of Square, Area = S*S
In case of Rectangle, Area = (S-2)*(S+2)
Now, difference = S*S - (S-2)*(S+2) = 2^2 = 4
So, sufficient.
Then ans. is B
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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Fence is \(x\). So, for the square, each side is \(\frac{x}{4}\). So area of the square is \(\frac{x^2}{16}\)
(we can cut \(\frac{y}{2}\) meter from any two sides of the \(\frac{x}{4}\) square and add \(\frac{y}{2}\) meter to the other sides to form rectangle.)
For the rectangle,
width = \(\frac{x}{4 } - \frac{y}{2}\).
Then, length = \(\frac{x}{4 }+\frac{y}{2}\)
\(area= length*width=\) \((\frac{x}{4}+\frac{y}{2})(\frac{x}{4}-\frac{y}{2}) = \frac{x^2}{16} - \frac{y^2}{4}; Since, {a^2-b^2 =(a+b)(a-b)}\)
Then the difference is \(|\frac{x^2}{16} - \frac{x^2}{16} + \frac{y^2}{4} |\)
which is \(\frac{y^2}{4}\)
so, for any \(x\) and \(y\) value, the difference of the area will always be \(\frac{y^2}{4}\).
we need only \(y\) value to know the difference.
From statement 1, \(xy=256\) : we need to know by heart that this statement will never give any unique value of \(y\) and \(x\).
Statement 2 is giving exactly what we need. \(y=4\).
so, the difference in area is 4.
Answer: B
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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The x metres of fencing that Patricia purchased represents the perimeter of the geometrical objects mentioned. From this information, we need to find the areas and hence the difference between the areas.

If we assume the side of the square as ‘a’, the perimeter would be 4a and we can say x = 4a.

If we assume the width of the rectangle as b, its length will be b+y. Therefore, the perimeter would be 4b + 2y and so we can say x = 4b + 2y.

Equating the two perimeters (since both represent x) and simplifying, we get,
a = b + \(\frac{y}{2}\).
Therefore, area of the square = \(a^2\) = \((b + \frac{y}{2})^2\) = \(b^2\) + \(y^2\) + by.

Area of the rectangle = b ( b+y) = \(b^2\) + by.

Clearly, the area of the square is bigger and hence the positive difference in the areas = Area of the square – Area of the rectangle = \(y^2\). This way, we now know that we need the value of y to answer the question.

The value of y is given in statement II. Therefore, statement II alone is sufficient.

Statement I alone is insufficient since it does not give us a unique value for y and hence doesn’t give us a unique answer to the question.
The correct answer option is B.

At the start, I focussed on breaking down the question statement and used the question data to construct an equation which told me what to look for in the statements. You need to do this on all word problems where a lot of data is given as part of the question. Without doing this, if you start analyzing the statements directly, you’d be missing out on the most important data in a DS question.

Hope that helps!
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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gmatt1476 wrote:
Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use all of the fencing to enclose a square region, but later decided to use all of the fencing to enclose a rectangular region with length y meters greater than its width. In square meters, what is the positive difference between the area of the square region and the area of the rectangular region?

(1) xy = 256
(2) y = 4


DS37571.01


Information given is; 4a = 2w+2w(w+y)

What do we want to know; a^2 — w(w+y), which is the difference between the area of the square region and the area of the rectangular region.

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Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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gmatt1476 wrote:
Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use all of the fencing to enclose a square region, but later decided to use all of the fencing to enclose a rectangular region with length y meters greater than its width. In square meters, what is the positive difference between the area of the square region and the area of the rectangular region?

(1) xy = 256
(2) y = 4
DS37571.01

1. Let the side of the square be \(b\). Now, as the fencing was bought to enclose the square hence we can safely conclude that \(4b = x\) i.e. perimeter of the square is equal to \(x\)

2. Let the width of the rectangle be \(a\) and length be \(y + a\). Now, as the fencing was bought to enclose the rectangle hence we can safely conclude that \(4a + 2y = x\) i.e. perimeter of the rectangle is equal to \(x\)

3. The difference between the areas:
\(b^2 - a(y+a) = b^2 - a^2 - ay\)

4. Replacing \(b\) with \(\frac{x}{4}\) and \(a\) with \(\frac{x-2y}{4}\)

\((\frac{x}{4})^2 - (\frac{x-2y}{4})^2 - (\frac{x-2y}{4})*y\)

\(\frac{x^2}{16} - (\frac{x^2 - 4xy + 4y^2}{16}) - (\frac{xy - 2y^2}{4})\)

Equalizing the denominators to work out the fractions:-
\(\frac{x^2}{16} - (\frac{x^2 - 4xy + 4y^2}{16}) - (\frac{4xy - 8y^2}{16})\)

\(\frac{x^2 - x^2 - 4y^2 + 4xy - 4xy + 8y^2}{16}\)

Cancelling out terms:-
\(\frac{x^2 - x^2 + 4xy - 4xy + 8y^2 - 4y^2}{16}\) \(=\) \(\frac{4y^2}{16}\)

Multiplying the numerator and denominator with 4:-
\(\frac{y^2}{4}\)

We need the value of \(y\) and option B provides it. Ans. B
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
hi guys
I edited the solution to the question as the cases I took to prove statement 1 was wrong

thanks, ZoltanBP for pointing out the mistake
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Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
CrackVerbalGMAT wrote:
Clearly, the area of the square is bigger and hence the positive difference in the areas = Area of the square – Area of the rectangle = \(y^2\). This way, we now know that we need the value of y to answer the question.

I get the same result as you, y^2, but I see that many in this thread get y^2/4.

Here is my reasoning:

Side of the square = x/4

Width of rectangle = (x/4)-y

Length of rectangle = (x/4)+y

What we add from a square side to the length of the rectangle will be equal to what we subtract from a square side to get the width of the rectangle.

If x = 100 m, then sides of square = 25 m.
We still have 100 m of fencing for the rectangle. If the length is 25+15 m, then the width will be 25-15 m.

Area of rectangle = ((x/4)+y) * ((x/4)-y) = (a+b)(a-b) = x^2/16 - y^2

The positive difference will be y^2 = 16, not y^2/4.
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
GMAT Data Sufficiency - Squares and Rectangles - How are they connected sometimes?

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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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Re: Patricia purchased x meters of fencing. She originally intended to use [#permalink]
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