nakedsnake2614 wrote:
KarunMendiratta wrote:
Explanation:
Any 3-digit number \(xyz\) can be written as \(100x + 10y + z\)
\(abc = 100a + 10b + c\)
\(cba = 100c + 10b + a\)
So, \(D = 99a - 99c = 99(a - c)\)
If \(D\) is a multiple of \(7\) then \((a - c)\) must be \(7\)
Let us look for cases for which \((a - c) = 7\);
Case I: a = 9 and c = 2
Case II: a = 8 and c = 1
Case III: a = 7 and c = 0
Now, we can have two feasible cases and \(b\) can take 10 values
So, Number of values of D which are divisible by \(7 = (2)(10) = 20\)
Col. A: 20
Col. B: 15
Hence, option A
NOTE: Case III is invalid as c = 0, \(cba\) becomes a 2-digit integer
The question asks about the different values of D. No matter what value of b you consider, the value of D remains the same. Why would you then consider them as 10 different values?
Posted from my mobile device nakedsnake2614Rightly said, I've made the changes
The question should read "Number of values of \(abc\) which are divisible by 7"
Apologies everyone for the inconvenience