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Maths Problem
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7 times X times a 5 figure number always gives an answer consisting of Xs, and it dosn't matter what number is used for the X. What is the 5 figure number?
Anybody any ideas on this one please
Anybody any ideas on this one please
Answers
GM - The question says: "There's a mystery 5-figure number which, when multiplied both by 7 and by any single-digit number, always produces an answer where every digit is the same as that single-digit number. What's that mystery 5-figure number?" Taking 4 as an example for the single-digit number, that means that 28 (= 7 x 4) times the mystery number must come...
17:14 Fri 05th Dec 2014
-- answer removed --
GM - The question says:
"There's a mystery 5-figure number which, when multiplied both by 7 and by any single-digit number, always produces an answer where every digit is the same as that single-digit number. What's that mystery 5-figure number?"
Taking 4 as an example for the single-digit number, that means that 28 (= 7 x 4) times the mystery number must come to 4 or 44 or 444 or 4444, etc. But since a 5 digit number must be between 10000 and 99999, the required string-of-4s number must be between 280,000 and 2,800,000, i.e. 444,444
Dividing 444,444 by 28 gives 15873.
Checking other examples confirms the answer. e.g.
7 times 8 x 15873 = 888,888.
That way of proving it (by exhaustion) would score poorly in a maths exam (because it lacks 'elegance') but it's the simplest way of finding the required answer here.
"There's a mystery 5-figure number which, when multiplied both by 7 and by any single-digit number, always produces an answer where every digit is the same as that single-digit number. What's that mystery 5-figure number?"
Taking 4 as an example for the single-digit number, that means that 28 (= 7 x 4) times the mystery number must come to 4 or 44 or 444 or 4444, etc. But since a 5 digit number must be between 10000 and 99999, the required string-of-4s number must be between 280,000 and 2,800,000, i.e. 444,444
Dividing 444,444 by 28 gives 15873.
Checking other examples confirms the answer. e.g.
7 times 8 x 15873 = 888,888.
That way of proving it (by exhaustion) would score poorly in a maths exam (because it lacks 'elegance') but it's the simplest way of finding the required answer here.