Re: 2 sides in both the triangles ABC and DEF are 5 and 10 respectively.
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08 Sep 2025, 07:51
For example, with third sides of 14.99 and 5.01 , the difference would be 9.98 . However, the question asks for the greatest possible integer difference.
The perimeter of a triangle with sides 5 and 10 is $P=15+x$, where $\(5<x<15\)$.
The difference in perimeters is $\(\left|P_1-P_2\right|=\left|\left(15+x_1\right)-\left(15+x_2\right)\right|=\left|x_1-x_2\right|\)$.
To maximize this difference, we need to choose values for the two third sides, $\(x_1\)$ and $\(x_2\)$, that are as far apart as possible.
- $\(x_1\)$ must be a number very close to 15 , but not 15 itself. For example, $\(x_1=14.999 \ldots\)$
- $\(x_2\)$ must be a number very close to 5 , but not 5 itself. For example, $\(x_2=5.001 \ldots\)$
The difference $\(\left|x_1-x_2\right|\)$ will be a number that is less than 10 but can be arbitrarily close to 10 . The set of all possible differences is the interval $\((0,10)\)$.
The question asks for the greatest possible integer value in this interval. The integers in the interval $\((0,10)\)$ are $\(\{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9\}\)$. The largest of these is 9 .
So, while the numerical difference can be a decimal like 9.99 , the greatest integer difference is 9 .