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Originally posted by KillerSquirrel on 15 Apr 2007, 15:38.
Last edited by KillerSquirrel on 15 Apr 2007, 23:37, edited 1 time in total.
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alfyG
querio you are right.. but you do not need to introduce a formula for this type of problem; the general form can readily be derived; that is 3^n
I think the key to GMAT success is to solve these types of problems with as little 'external resources' as possible.
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I agree with alfyG - if you are too busy writing down a formula, you are limiting yourself. Try to apply the formula after you thought about the problem and you think you know the right way to solve it, and only if you must ! sometimes more (math) is less (time).
What is the sum of the 20th and 21st terms in the sequence 1, 3, 9, 27... where each term is 3 times the preceding term?
4 * 3^19
10 * 3^19
4 * 3^20
10 * 3^20
3^39
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the series is 1,3,9,27,... i.e 1,3^n where n=1,2,3, . therefore 20th term = 3^19 and 21st term= 3 ^20.
Now adding them we get 3^19(3+1)= 4*3^19. So the answere is A.
querio you are right.. but you do not need to introduce a formula for this type of problem; the general form can readily be derived; that is 3^n
I think the key to GMAT success is to solve these types of problems with as little 'external resources' as possible.
I agree with alfyG - if you are too busy writing down a formula, you are limiting yourself. Try to apply the formula after you thought about the problem and you think you know the right way to solve it, and only if you must ! sometimes more (math) is less (time).
Show more
I agree. However, I wouldn't say either "don't apply the formula before thinking about the problem". My advice would be to try all the different methods, select the one that you are more comfortable with and then master it! Bear in mind that energy management is crucial on the Gmat, so if it takes you a couple of extra seconds to solve a problem applying a formula but you consumed less energy by doing so, then apply the formula! The same will apply if you would like to follow the "pure math" way. Summarizing, when selecting a method to solve a problem don't consider only the TIME YOU SAVE, but also the ENERGY YOU SPEND!
Cheers,
Fede
I completely agree with your comment, Querio, but what i meant to say is that you have the right way to solve GMAT problems (i.e every solution in the OG is the right way) but you have the fast way to solve those problems (i.e pluging in). in either cases knowing and understanding the right way is crucial in geting good GMAT scores, even if you are using the fast way, but in most cases you don't need to use formulas to solve a problem. Only to understand the logic behind it.
"You can't get a Nobel Prize for solveing a GMAT problem"
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Hi there,
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