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Re: Remainders - What you should know [#permalink]
CarolineLim12 wrote:
I also like to think of reminders in a literal way. If it says "when x is divided by 7, it's reminder is 3" then I would start with x being numbers like 10 (7+3), 17 (14+3), 24 (21+3), etc.

In such questions we can not take q=0 right?
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Re: Remainders - What you should know [#permalink]
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PriyaMittal1321 wrote:
CarolineLim12 wrote:
I also like to think of reminders in a literal way. If it says "when x is divided by 7, it's reminder is 3" then I would start with x being numbers like 10 (7+3), 17 (14+3), 24 (21+3), etc.

In such questions we can not take q=0 right?


no definitely
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Re: Remainders - What you should know [#permalink]
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mingzhuqiuxia wrote:
Its a more complex problem when X is divide by two different int with two different remainder

for example if n is divided by 12 and remainder is 3 (we can write n = 12x + 3) and when n is divided by 5, its remainder is 1 (n = 5y + 1). Here x and y are quotients.
Lets equate both equations 12x+3 = 5y + 1,
[12x+2][/5]=y
now plug some integer value of x so that result is integer,
plugging x= 4 gives y = 50/5=10, plug 10 in n = 5(10) +1 = 51, this is one possible value of n true for both.
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Re: Remainders - What you should know [#permalink]
Hello from the GRE Prep Club BumpBot!

Thanks to another GRE Prep Club member, I have just discovered this valuable topic, yet it had no discussion for over a year. I am now bumping it up - doing my job. I think you may find it valuable (esp those replies with Kudos).

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Re: Remainders - What you should know [#permalink]
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