Flashcards Quantitative Aptitude Revision Maths Shortcuts
Flashcards Quantitative Aptitude Revision Maths Shortcuts
Flashcards Quantitative Aptitude Revision Maths Shortcuts
The sum of the interior angles of a polygon depends on the number of sides (n) the polygon has: (n 2) x 180 = Sum of Interior angles of a polygon
In the figure above, (f + g + h + i + j) = 540, because the polygon has 5 sides Every polygon can be cut in x triangles, and the sum of each triangles interior angles is 180. This is an alternative method to find the sum of a polygons interior angles
Notice that the height is also a line perpendicular to the two bases, inside the trapezoid Sometimes, you will have to draw a right triangle. If you know both base 1 and 2, you know the base leg. If you know the outer leg, you have 2 dimensions and can find the third, which is the height, via pythagorean theorem!!!
GMAT may require you to divide some shapes. Notice, for example, that a trapezoid can be cut into 2 right triangles and 1 rectangle:
Surface Area = the SUM of the areas of all of the faces Rectangular Solid: 2(Base x Height) + 2 (Width x Height) + 2 (Base x Width) Cube: 6 x (Side)
Volume = Length x Width x Height Volume of a Cube: Side GMAT TRICK: How many Books, each with a volume of 100 in, can be packed into a crate with a volume of 5,000 in?
You cannot answer to this question without knowing the exact dimensions of each book. Remember: if you are fitting 3 dimensional objects into other 3-dimensional objects, knowing the respective volumes is not enough
If angle a = angle b, their opposite sides will be equal as well. Also, the biggest angle of a triangle will be opposite to the biggest side of this triangle.
(3) The sum of any two sides of a triangle MUST BE GREATER THAN the third side. So, if you are given two sides of a triangle, the length of the third side must lie between the difference and the sum of the two given sides
The other side: 11 < x < 73 (supposing this is not a right triangle) Common Right Triangles
3-4-5 and its key multiples: 6-8-10, 9-12-15, 12-16-20 5-12-13 and its key multiples: 10-24-26 8-15-17
Quantitative Review Geometry Triangles & Diagonals Isosceles Triangles and the 45-45-90 triangle
The 45-45-90 triangle is a special triangle with 2 equal sides and a relation between each side. If you are given one dimension on a 45-45-90 triangle, you can find the others. Relationship between sides: 45 - 45 - 90 Leg - leg - hypotenuse 1 : 1 :
A 45-45-90 is exactly half of a square. Two 45-45-90 triangles put together make up a square. So, if you are given the diagonal of a square, you can find the side by using the relation above
This triangle, when cut in half, yields two equal 30-60-90 triangles. The long leg will be the height, the hypotenuse is the equilateral triangles side and the short leg is half of the equilateral triangles half. Relationship between sides: 30 60 90 Short leg - long leg - hypotenuse 1 : sq-rt 3 : 2 So, if you have either the side or the height of a equilateral triangle, you can find its area
To find the diagonal of a rectangle, you must know either both sides or the length of one side and the proportion from this to the other side To find the diagonal of a rectangular solid, if you know the 3 dimensions, you can use pythagorean theorem twice:
First, use pythagorean theorem with the length and the width to find the diagonal of the bottom face. Then, use pythagorean theorem again to find the main diagonal. The sides for this second pythagorean will be: the height, the bottom face diagonal and the main diagonal.
Circumference: C = 2r
Some GMAT problems will require you to calculate . In those, use 3 or 22/7. A full revolution of a spinning wheel means a point on the edge of a wheel travels one circumference. If a wheel spins at 3 revolutions per second and its diameter is 10 units, a point on the edge will travel at a rate of 30/s (Circumference = 10 , and the point travel 3 circumferences per second).
Perimeter of a Sector
The perimeter of a sector is ARC + 2 Radius
To find either the Arc Length or the perimeter of a sector, all you need is the radius plus the angle of the sector
Quantitative Review Geometry Circles and Cylinders Circles: Area of a Circle A = r All we must know is the radius Area of a Sector
Area of a Sector = r . (x/360)
An inscribed angle is equal to half of the arch it intercepts. You can be asked this property by having the outer angle different then half the central angle. If that is the case, the point of the central angle
Quantitative Review Geometry Circles and Cylinders Circles: Inscribed Triangles A triangle is said to be inscribed in a circle if all of the vertices are points on the circle Main property: if one of the sides is the diameter, the triangle IS a right triangle. Conversely, any inscribed right triangle has the diameter as one of its sides. A right triangle can be opposed to a semicircle. If you need to calculate that arc, it is 180 Take care: A triangle inscribed in a semicircle doesnt have the same properties as a properly inscribed triangle.
Quantitative Review Geometry Circles and Cylinders Cylinders Surface Area: 2(r) + 2rh Volume: V = rh To find either the surface area or the volume, you only need the radius and the height.
GMAT TRICK: Two cylinders can have the same volume but fit a different larger object. Different combinations of radius and heights can produce the same volume but very different cylinders.
The sum of interior angles is 360 Interior angles that combine to form a line sum 180 Angles found opposite each other where two lines intersect are equal
These properties apply to more than two lines that intersect at a point
Quantitative Review Geometry Lines and Angles Parallel lines cut by a transversal:
In this figure, we have only two angles, A and B. All the other acute angles equal B, and the obtuse angles equal A
The eight angles in the diagram above are actually 2, and a+b = 180 All the acute angles (<90) are equal. All the obtuse angles (90<x<180) are also equal Any acute angle is supplementary to any obtuse angle (a+b = 180) GMAT can disguise the lines, by not drawing them completely. Extending them can help you to find out whether they are transversal or parallel. GMAT uses the symbol II to indicate 2 lines are parallel. MN II OP means those segments are parallel
Slope-intercept Equation: y = mx + b
Quantitative Review Geometry Coordinate Plan Step by Step: from 2 points to a line
(1) Find the slope with rise over run (2) Plug in the Slope (3) Solve for b by plugging the coordinates of one point (4) Write the equation in the form y = mx + b
Example: Point 1 = (5, -2) - Point 2 = (3,4) (1) Rise over run: (-2 - 4) / (5 3) = -3 (2) y = -3x + b (3) 4 = -3.3 + b --- b = 13 (4) y = -3x + 13
If GMAT gives you one point and one intercept, dont forget: an intercept is also a point, so you are able to find the equation
Quadrants
If you are required to find out which quadrant a given line passes two and you have the equation, set x and y to zero to find the two intercepts and draw the line. This is the fastest way
If two lines in a plan do not intersect, they are parallel no pair of numbers (x,y) will satisfy both equations. Another possibility: both equations are the same. Then, infinitely many points will solve both equations. To test whether a point lies on a line, just test it by plugging the numbers into the equation.
Combo Problems
If GMAT asks you for x + y instead of only x or y, never try to solve for the isolated variables. It will almost always be much easier to isolate the combo and get the answer. Look for similarities in the numerator and denominator. You can cancel variables or similar numbers. This will save you a lot of time.
Again: the key to solve some combos is to try to find similarities between 2 equations, instead of trying to solve them. Isolating terms instead of working with single variable is essential.
Quadratic equations
A quick way to work with quadratics is to factor them. If you have the equation ax + bx + c, when a=1:
Find two integers whose product equals c and whose sum equals b Rewrite the equation in the form (x + k)(x + w), where k and w are those two numbers which resulted in the product of c and in the sum of b.
Disguised Quadratics
When you find an equation similar to 3w = 6w, dont forget that dividing both sides by 3w will cause you to miss one solution! If you factor, you get w(3w 6) = 0, so w = 0 is also a solution!
Quantitative Review Algebra Factoring / Distributing / Formulas Disguised forms of common factored expressions:
a - 1 = (a + 1)(a - 1) a + b = 9 + 2 ab = a - 2ab + b = 9 = (a - b) = 9 = a b = +/- 3 (x + 4x + 4) / (x - 4) = (x + 2)(x + 2)/(x + 2)(x 2) = (x + 2)/(x 2) Attention: you can only simplify the equation above if you know that x 2. Otherwise, the equation is undefined
Formulas
Plug-in Formulas GMAT may give you a strange formula and ask you for the result by giving you the values of all variables. These problems are just a matter of careful computation.
Inequalities
If you multiply or divide an inequality by a negative number, you have to flip the inequality sign. You cannot multiply or divide an inequality by a variable, unless you know the sign of the variable. The reason is you wouldnt be able to know whether you have to change the inequality sign.
Combining Inequalities
Example: x > 8, x < 17, x + 5 < 19 (1) Solve any inequality that needs to be solved: x + 5 < 19 = x < 14
Combining inequalities
First, make all the inequality signs face the same direction. Them, add them up.
< c + b < d + b < d = a + 2b < c + 2d You can always add inequalities. However, you can only multiply inequalities if both sides or both inequalities are positive. We can never subtract or divide inequalities!!
Optimization problems
On problems involving minimization or maximization, focus on the largest and smallest possible values of each variables.
b + -
c +
d +
bd? -
bd must be < 0 , as b and d will have different signs Whenever you need to proceed with a positive/negative analysis, building a table like the one above may be a good idea.
Direct Algebra
Break the problem down into manageable parts Write every step, as it may be difficult to verify the answer
If you see similar/inverse equations, dividing/multiplying them may be a good idea to cancel variables.
Quantitative Review Algebra Formulas and Functions Advanced Formulas and Functions Advanced
Recursive formulas for sequences A recursive formula looks like this: An = An-1 + 9 To solve a recursive sequence, you need to be given the recursive rule and also the value of one of the items. 1) Linear sequence: S1 = k + x x is the difference between two terms, and k is the value of the sequence for S0. 2) Exponential sequence: Sn = Sn-1k You can find k by having 2 terms of the sequence. Exponential growth
The formula for exponential growth is: Y(t) = Y0.kt y0 is the quantity when t = 0.
Simmetry
GMAT has difficult symmetry problem, such as: For which of the following f(x) = f(1/x) ?
Optimization problems
Maximizing linear functions: since linear functions either rise or fall continuously, the max/min points occur at boundaries: at smallest or largest possible x as given in the problem. Maximizing quadratics: The key is to make the squared expression equal to 0. Whatever value of x makes the squared expression equal 0 is the value of x that maximizes/minimizes the function
GMAT can also hide positive constraints. Sides of a square, number of votes, etc will always be positive. When you have a positive constraint, you can:
Eliminate negative solutions from a quadratic function Multiply or divide an inequality by a variable Cross-multiply inequalities: x/y < y/x x < y Change an inequality sign for reciprocals: x<y; 1/x > 1/y
Quantitative Review Word Translations Rates & Work Rates and Work - Translations
Average Rate = Total Distance / Total time Work Problems
Normally, you will have to convert the rate. This is the only difference to the RTD problems. Example: Oscar can perform one surgery in 1.5 hours. You have to convert it to: Oscar can perform 2/3 surgeries per hour. This is the actual rate. If two or more agents are performing simultaneous work, add the work rates. (Typical problems are: Machine A, Machine B). Exepction: one agent undoes the others work, like a pump putting water into a tank and another drawing water out. Rate will be a b. Example: Larry can wash a car in 1 hour, Moe can wash it in 2 hours, and Curly washes it in 4 hours. How long does it take for them to wash 1 car? Answer: Rate is 1/1 + 1/2 + 1/4 = 7/4 cars/ hour. To find the rate for 1 car, just take the reciprocal: 4/7 hours to wash 1 car (34 minutes)
Population problems
In such problems, normally a population increases by a common factor every time period. You can build a population table to avoid computation errors.
Quantitative Review Word Translations Rates and Work Advanced Rates and work Advanced
Advanced rates and work problems involve either more complicated language to translate, more complicated algebra to solve or trickier Data Sufficiency logic to follow Be ready to break rate or work problems into natural stages. Likewise, combine workers or travelers into a single row when they work or travel together.
Example: Liam is pulled over for speeding just as he is arriving at work. He explains that he could not afford to be late today, and has arrived at work only 5 minutes before he is to start. The officer explains that if he had driven 5mph slower for his whole commute, he would have arrived on time. If his commute is 30 miles, how fast was he actually driving?
Rate Actual Hypothetical r+5 r Time 30/(r+5) 30/r Distance 30 30
Since the slower trip takes 4 minutes more, 30/r = 30/(r+5) + 1/15 30/r = (r + 455)/(15(r+5)) 450r + 2,250 = r + 455r r + 5r 2,250 = 0 r = 45
Quantitative Review Word Translations Rates and Work Advanced Equations for Exponential Growth or Decay
Problems like: How long does it take to double the population? Formula: Population = S.2t/I, where S is the starting value, t is the time and I is the Interval, or the amount of time given for the quantity to double. If the quantity triples: Population = S.3t/I. If the quantity is cut by half: Population = S.(0.5)t/I
Example: If a population of rabbits double every 7 months and the starting population is 100, what will be the population in 21 months? Answer: Population = 100 . 221/7, = 100.2 = 800
The combined ratio will normally be asked as the least number of a population. The least number is the sum of common minimum denominator. In the situation above, the least number is 15 + 12 + 10 = 37.
Combinatorics
Fundamental counting principle: if you must make a number of separate decisions, then multiply the number of ways to make each individual decision to find the number of ways to make all decisions together.
Example: If you have 4 types of bread, 3 types of cheese and 2 types of ham and wish to make a sandwich, you can make it in 4.3.2 = 24 different ways.
For problems where some choices are restricted and/or affect other choices, choose most restricted options first (slot method):
Example: you must insert a 5-digit lock code, but the first and last numbers need to be odd, and no repetition is allowed. How many codes are possible?
= 6,720
Combinations x Permutations
You have to be ready to see the difference between the 2 statements below: If seven people are going to sit in 3 seats (with 4 left standing), how many different seating arrangements can we have? If three of seven standby passengers are to be selected for a flight, how many different combinations can we have? In the first problem, order matters. So, it is a permutation, and the formula is: n! / (n r)!, where r! is the number of chosen items from a pool. For the second problem, all it matters is if the passenger is flying or not. Since the order of chosen passengers doesnt matter, the problem is a combination, and the formula is: n! / (n-r)! r!
Multiple arrangements
In a group with 12 seniors and 11 juniors, you need to pick 3 seniors and 2 juniors. In how many different ways can you do that? For these problems, you have to calculate the arrangements separately and then multiply both. Answer: 220 . 55 = 12,100
When you have an OR problem where events cannot happen together, just add the probabilities (as above). When the events can happen together, use the formula: P(a or b) = P(a) + P(b) P(a AND b)
Example: What is the probability of getting either a 3 in a die or a head in a coin? P(a) = 1/6. P(b) = 1/2. P(a AND b) = 1/12. P(a or b) = 1/6 + 1/2 1/12 = 7/12
Statistics
Evenly spaced sets
The average of an evenly spaced set is: (FIRST TERM + LAST TERM) /2
Weighted averages
If 94 weighs 40%, 88 weighs 30%, 98 weighs 20% and 85 weighs 10%, what is the average? Answer: 94 * 0.4 + 88 * 0.3 + 98 * 0.2 + 85 * 0.1 = 92.1 Properties of weighted averages: You do not need concrete weight values. Having the ratio is enough. A weighted average will fall closer to whichever value is weighted more heavily. If the computation is difficult, you can try to eliminate alternatives.
Standard Deviation
If each data point in a set is increased by a number, the standard deviation wont be affected. If the whole set is increased by a factor of 7 (multiply by 7), the standard deviation will increase by a factor of 7.
Overlapping sets
The double-set matrix
Columns must represent opposite information from each other, and the same is required for the rows. For example: if you have students that study either spanish or english, columns can contain spanish/not spanish, while rows can contain french/not french.
Grouping Problems
You need to group 1 person from division A, 2 from division B and 3 from division C. Division A has 20 people, division B has 30, and C has 40. What is the smallest number of people who will not be assigned to a group? A: 20/1 = 20 groups are possible B: 30/2 = 15 groups are possible C: 40/3 = 13 groups are possible. The limiting factor is group C, as they have the smallest number of groups to be formed. Therefore, we can only form 13 groups, and this is when the smallest number of people will be left over: 12 people in total.
Scheduling
How many days does the standard warranty of product X last? (1) Marck purchased in jan 97. Warranty didnt expire until march (2) Santos purchased in May 94. Warranty expired in may.
Quantitative Review Word Translations Comb / Prop / Stats Advanced Combinations vs Permutations
If switching the elements in a chosen set creates a different set, it is a permutation. If not, it is a combination.
Quantitative Review Word Translations Comb / Prop / Stats Advanced Shortcuts for averages
To know how much the mean will change, you only need to know the difference between the new term and the mean, and also the number of terms Residuals are the difference between a sets data points and its average. For any set, the residuals sum to zero.
Example: If the mean of the set {97, 100, 85, 90, 94, 80, 92, x} is 91, what is the value of x? Instead of doing all the calculation, you can find the residual of each term: +6, +9, -6, -1, +3, -11, +1. This sum yields +1, so x leaves a residual of -1 when compared to 91. x = 90.
Quantitative Review Number Properties Divisibility and primes Divisibility and Primes
Arithmetic rules:
The sum/difference/product of 2 integers is always an integer The quotient of two integers is not always an integer An integer is said to be divisible by another if the result is also an integer
Prime numbers: Since 2 is the only even prime number, the sum/difference of two primes can only result an odd number if one of them is 2. In this case, the product will be even. For all other cases, the product will be odd and the sum/difference will be even. Conversely, knowing that the product of two prime numbers is even OR that the sum/difference is odd is sufficient to know that one of the prime numbers is 2.
Example: If x>1, what is x? (1) There are x unique factors of x (2) x plus any prime larger than x is odd. Statement (1) is sufficient as this property holds only for 1 and 2. Statement 2 only tells us that x is even, as it is not stated in the problem that x is prime.
Consecutive Integers
Consecutive integer sets are a special type of evenly spaced sets, as the distance between each term is always 1. Properties of evenly spaced sets: The arithmetic mean and the median are always equal Mean and median are equal to the average of FIRST and LAST terms The sum of all elements is equal to the mean times the number of items
Important properties
The average of an odd number of consecutive integers will be an integer The average of an even number of consecutive integers will not be an integer
Exponents
Even exponents hide the sign of their base. GMAT uses this trick constantly. Fractional base: When the base is between 0 and 1, if the exponent increases, the value of the expression decreases.
The exponent
When multiplying 2 terms with the same base, add the exponents. When dividing, subtract the exponents. Nested exponents: (3) = 36 An expression with negative exponent is the reciprocal of what that expression would be with positive exponent.
Rules of exponents
(a/b)x = ax/bx 3 + 3 + 3 = 3.3 = 34 axbx = (ab) x x-a = 1/xa
Roots
Main difference between exponents: even roots have only one solution. 4 can only be 2, and not -2. Negative roots can only exist if they are odd: -27 exists.
Simplifying a root
GMAT very often tries to trick you by giving a root linked by addition where it is tempting to simplify the terms, for example: (25 + 16). It is tempting to think that this will result into 5 + 4, but you can only simplify roots when the terms inside/outside are linked by multiplication or division
Absolute value
The absolute value |x y| must be interpreted as the distance between x and y. If you see the expression |x 3| < 4, think that the distance between x and 3 is less than 4 units. When you have 2 variables in absolute value equations, you should pick numbers to eliminate answer choices.
Fractions
If you add the same number to both the numerator and denominator of a fraction, the fraction gets closer to 1, regardless of its original value. This means a proper fraction will increase its value, while an improper fraction will decrease. This rule is very important to denominate which fraction is bigger, as you can add numbers to compare. 3/2 > 4/3 > 13/12 > 1,013/1,012
Percents
Take care with the difference between what is 30% of 80?, 75% of what number is 21? and 90 is what percent of 40? 30% of 80? = x/80 = 30/100, x = 24 75% of what number is 21? 21/x = 75/100 = 3x = 84, x = 28 90 is what percent of 40? 90/40 = x/100, x = 225
Successive percents
Those are very common on GMAT. A price which is increased by x% and then decreased by y%, for example, is the same as ORIGINAL . (1 + x%) . (1 y%)
Chemical mixtures
A 500 mL solution is 20% alcohol. If 100mL of water is added, what is the new concentration of alcohol? The original ratio 1:5 will become 1:6, so the concentration is 1/6 or 16,67%
FDPs Advanced
Terminating decimals only have 2s and 5s as prime factors in their denominators. If the denominator has a power of 10 minus 1 (9, 99), you will have repeating decimals