I'm pulling a son of a n00b

Koenigsegg

Banned
Jun 29, 2005
2,267
1
0
Dear Math Majors,

This quarter, we will be running a "problem of the week" project. Once a
week,
a challenging problem will be proposed to our undergraduate students. The name
of the first person correctly solving the problem will be announced on the
web page.

http://tinypic.com/e01um8.jpg

I honestly don't care at all about this "prize" and probably won't submit it at all if someone happens to post a correct answer.

Instead I'm posting this to those that are bored and want to extend your e-penises.
 

mchammer187

Diamond Member
Nov 26, 2000
9,114
0
76
i'm guessing 14

7 slices 1/8th the size

and 7 slices 1/56th the size

8 people show up than 7 people take a 1/7th slice and the last takes 7 1/56th slices

7 people show up than they each take 1 1/7th and 1 1/56th
 

Demon-Xanth

Lifer
Feb 15, 2000
20,551
2
81
Originally posted by: mugs
My first thought was 56, but then I saw the unequal sizes part... but I think that's just to throw you off... (56 also seems way too easy...)

No, it makes a difference.

Cut it in 7 1/8th size pieces, and 7 1/56th size pieces. If 8 show up, serve 7 people the 1/8th size one, and one person all of the 1/56th size pieces. If 7 people show up, serve each person one of each size.
 

Drakkon

Diamond Member
Aug 14, 2001
8,401
1
0
if i showed up to a party and some ^itch told me i could only have 1/56th of a piece fo cake I'd be like wtf....wheres my cake %@%...die!!!
 

nakedfrog

No Lifer
Apr 3, 2001
61,838
17,552
136
None of you are listing the size of the pieces. Although I'm not entirely sure that's possible without knowing how big the cake is.
 

MrCodeDude

Lifer
Jun 23, 2001
13,674
1
76
Originally posted by: Lifted
8 slices. It doesn't say there can't be any left over.
This is correct.

It says each person must get the same amount. It says nothing about a left-over slice.