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Thread: Help! - maths
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5th February 2017, 04:19 PM #1
Help! - maths
A forum I am trying to get one has a secret question I can not get past.
How many days in February 1803 PLUS February 1716, now add -21, and take the square root.
I am so stumped!
Can anyone help?
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5th February 2017, 04:27 PM #2
28+29-21=36
root(36)=6Franklin
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5th February 2017, 04:36 PM #3regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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5th February 2017, 04:44 PM #4GOLD MEMBER
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5th February 2017, 05:19 PM #5
The logic behind it is easy, it has to be a std 28 day February + a leap year to get a total that has a natural square root ie: 28 + 28 = 56 - 21 = 35, no natural sq rt
29 + 29 = 58 - 21 = 37, no natural sq rt
The nominated years are only to put you off track for confusions sake
(edit my bad maths)
Still no whole number natural sq rootThe person who never made a mistake never made anything
Cheers
Ray
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5th February 2017, 05:36 PM #6.
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5th February 2017, 06:47 PM #7
Hi,
The years are not just to confuse, if the year is dividable by 4 it is a leap year. Not sure off hand when the modern calendar came about so could still be a trap.
RegardsHugh
Enough is enough, more than enough is too much.
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5th February 2017, 06:59 PM #8GOLD MEMBER
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1583 is the first full year of the Gregorian calendar. 1753 was the first full year in which the U.S. (then a British colony) began using the Gregorian calendar.
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5th February 2017, 07:31 PM #9
I'd say 6 as well. What are we missing, if at all?
And do you really want to be on a forum that cannot do maths as well as we can?
Regards from Perth
DerekVisit www.inthewoodshop.com for tutorials on constructing handtools, handtool reviews, and my trials and tribulations with furniture builds.
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5th February 2017, 08:43 PM #10
Clinton hasn't told us yet if 6 is indeed the correct answer. In any case I assume the question is to determine if the answerer is a human and not a bot; not specifically meant to trick and trap. I'd prefer to be on a forum where the humans predominate. Many algorithms do maths quicker and more accurately than I do, even though I sometimes think in reverse polish.
Franklin
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6th February 2017, 03:04 AM #11
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6th February 2017, 03:11 AM #12
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6th February 2017, 03:23 AM #13
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6th February 2017, 06:56 AM #14GOLD MEMBER
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6th February 2017, 06:57 AM #15
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