<p>could anyone with the blue collegeboard book teach me an easy method of solving #16 on page 551? thanks.</p>
<p>Is the answer E? I think it is</p>
<p>OK so here goes nothing:
I am not the best at explaining this stuff</p>
<p>you see that they want a 12L by 10L rectangle, which would give you a total of 120L units</p>
<p>Then, if you look on your image above the question you need to figure out how one L by L unit would compare to a L by W unit.</p>
<p>you can see from the picture that 2L=3W, so a ratio of 1.5 (from W to L)
So, you can multiply 120 units by 1.5 and come up with 180.</p>
<p>Actually better way of exxplaining (i told you i suck)</p>
<p>since it 12L by 10L and you know that 1L=1.5W, change the 10L to equal 15W</p>
<p>then multiply 12 by 15 and get 180.</p>
<p>From the picture you can see that 2L = 3W (by looking at the two sides), so W = (2/3)L, which means that the top side is equal to (5/3)L. This means that the dimension of the rectangle given is (5/3)L x 2L. You're looking for the number of the rectangles in a rectangular region with dimension 12L x 10L, so determine what number you would need to multiply the dimensions of one region by [(5/3)L x 2L] to obtain the desired region. This number turns out to be 6:</p>
<p>(5/3)L x 6 = 10L
2L x 6 = 12L </p>
<p>Keep in mind that that's 6 lengthwise and 6 width-wise, for a total of 36. That means that you need 36 of the given "patterns," and in each pattern there are 5 rectangles "of dimension L by W" -- 36 x 5 = 180, so the answer is E.</p>
<p>EDIT: sr's explanation is definitely a lot faster... :p</p>
<p>Zach the answer it says in the book is E on pg560</p>
<p>Yeah, I saw my mistake and corrected it.</p>
<p>Just rephrasing sr's solution (I hate fracrions):
from the picture
2L = 3W
<em>5 *5
10L = 15W.
Region 12L</em>10L = 12L<em>15W = (12</em>15) (L<em>W) = 180 (L</em>W).
180 rectangles L by W is answer E.</p>
<p>Can anyone explain #15 on the same page? There has to be an fast/easy way to do it</p>