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Given: If 12 children purchased 34 candies and the range of the number of candies that they purchased is 2, which of the following can be the number of children who purchased 3 candies?
Candies children purchased ={2,3,4} or {1,2,3}

I. 2
2×3=6 candies
Remaining candies =34-6=28
Let us assume that children who purchased 2 candies=x
2x + 4(10-x) = 40-2x =28
x=6
6 Children purchased 2 candies, 2 children purchased 3 candies and 4 children purchased 4 candies.
Possible

II. 5
3×5=15
Remaining candies =34-15=19
Let us assume that x children purchased 2 candies
2x + 4(7-x) = 19
28-2x =19
x=4.5
Not possible

Let us assume that x children purchased 1 candies
x+2(7-x)=19
14-x=19
x=-5
Not possible

III. 11
11×3=33
Remaining 1 candy is purchased by remaining 1 child.
Possible

IMO D

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If 12 children purchased 34 candies and the range of the number of candies that they purchased is 2, which of the following can be the number of children who purchased 3 candies?

I. 2
II. 5
III. 11


A. I only
B. II only
C. I and II
D. I and III
E. I, II and III

- III. 11 X 3 = 33; 1 child gets 1 candy; total 12 children; satisfies the condition.- 11 is possible.

-II. 5 X 3 = 15 candies, 19 candy remain.
now all other children must receive 3 candies and no less than that, because the range has to be 2.
7 X 3 = 21 ------- exceeds the total; NOT possible.

Looking at options, III. is possible, but II. is not

Answer has to be D.
Answer D.
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Quote:
If 12 children purchased 34 candies and the range of the number of candies that they purchased is 2, which of the following can be the number of children who purchased 3 candies?

I. 2
II. 5
III. 11


A. I only
B. II only
C. I and II
D. I and III
E. I, II and III

using the options
if 11 children can have 3 then we can have
1 + 11(3) = 34 ,
1 child 1 and 11 children 3 , range is 2 , all conds. satisfied. Possible

If 2 children have 3 then
6*2 + 2*3 +4*4=34
Six children have 2 , 2 children have 3 and 4 children have 4 .
Range is 2 . All conditions satisfied : Possible

If 5 children have 3 then then 15 candies are used
7 children and 19 candies cannot be distributed such that the range is 4 and only 5 children have 3 candies

IMO D
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Quote:
If 12 children purchased 34 candies and the range of the number of candies that they purchased is 2, which of the following can be the number of children who purchased 3 candies?

I. 2
II. 5
III. 11

A. I only
B. II only
C. I and II
D. I and III
E. I, II and III

The question gives that
- the range of the number of candies that children purchased is 2
- the number of children is 12
- the number of candies is 34

The question asks the number of children who purchased 3 candies.

Then I will test the answer.
I. 2
If there are 2 children who purchased 3 candies, the remaining number of candies is 28 candies and the remaining number of children is 10.
x = the number of children who purchased 4 candies.
y = the number of children who purchased 2 candies.
4x+2y = 28
x + y = 10
I find that x = 4 , y = 6.
Keep it.

II. 5
If there are 5 children who purchased 3 candies, the remaining number of candies is 19 candies and the remaining number of children is 7.
1) x+y = 7
4x+2y = 19
x = 2.5 y = 4.5 Incorrect.
x = the number of children who purchased 4 candies.
z = the number of children who purchased 5 candies.
2) x+z = 7
4x+5z = 19
x = 16 , z= -9 Incorrect
Out.

III. 11
If there are 11 children who purchased 3 candies, the remaining number of candies is 1 candy and the remaining number of children is 1.
So the remaining number of children who purchased 1 candy = 1.
Keep it.

So the answer is I+III = D.

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Quote:

If 12 children purchased 34 candies and the range of the number of candies that they purchased is 2, which of the following can be the number of children who purchased 3 candies?

I. 2
II. 5
III. 11


A. I only
B. II only
C. I and II
D. I and III
E. I, II and III

Start by listing possible distributions with Range=2 that includes 3
1) 1 | 2 | 3
2) 2 | 3 | 4
3) 3 | 4 | 5

Refer to the possible choices and

Start with 11 (as it's the most limiting)
11/12 children x 3 candies = 33/34 candies
1/12 child x 1 candy = 1/34 candy
-> total 12/12 children & 34/34 candies
(III - 11 is possible)

Eliminate answer choices A, B & C

Now try with 5 (as it will eliminate either D or E)
5/12 children x 3 candies = 15/34 candies
7/12 children MUST get 19/34 candies ->
not possible with 1 & 2 pairs (too less, even if the 7 children got 2 candies each)
not possible with 2 & 4 pairs (whatever distribution will be an even number, cannot get 19 candies)
not possible with 4 & 5 pairs (too much, even if the 7 children got 4 candies only each)
(II - 5 is not possible)

Eliminate answer choice E
IMO the answer should be D
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