Who gets more money?












9














There are two people eating bread. One of them has 5 loaves of bread; the other one has 3. They invited a third person to eat with them. They ate all 8 loaves of bread, and out of appreciation he gave them 8 cents.



How should they divide the money to be fair?










share|improve this question
























  • Who gave away the 8 cents?
    – hat
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:16










  • @hat The third person I would think
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:18










  • @hat the third person gave them money for thanks
    – Dear
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:58










  • Can you verify each man ate the same amount of bread?
    – Longspeak
    Dec 24 '18 at 20:51
















9














There are two people eating bread. One of them has 5 loaves of bread; the other one has 3. They invited a third person to eat with them. They ate all 8 loaves of bread, and out of appreciation he gave them 8 cents.



How should they divide the money to be fair?










share|improve this question
























  • Who gave away the 8 cents?
    – hat
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:16










  • @hat The third person I would think
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:18










  • @hat the third person gave them money for thanks
    – Dear
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:58










  • Can you verify each man ate the same amount of bread?
    – Longspeak
    Dec 24 '18 at 20:51














9












9








9


0





There are two people eating bread. One of them has 5 loaves of bread; the other one has 3. They invited a third person to eat with them. They ate all 8 loaves of bread, and out of appreciation he gave them 8 cents.



How should they divide the money to be fair?










share|improve this question















There are two people eating bread. One of them has 5 loaves of bread; the other one has 3. They invited a third person to eat with them. They ate all 8 loaves of bread, and out of appreciation he gave them 8 cents.



How should they divide the money to be fair?







calculation-puzzle






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 25 '18 at 9:34









Rand al'Thor

69k14229462




69k14229462










asked Dec 24 '18 at 16:08









DearDear

482




482












  • Who gave away the 8 cents?
    – hat
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:16










  • @hat The third person I would think
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:18










  • @hat the third person gave them money for thanks
    – Dear
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:58










  • Can you verify each man ate the same amount of bread?
    – Longspeak
    Dec 24 '18 at 20:51


















  • Who gave away the 8 cents?
    – hat
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:16










  • @hat The third person I would think
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:18










  • @hat the third person gave them money for thanks
    – Dear
    Dec 24 '18 at 16:58










  • Can you verify each man ate the same amount of bread?
    – Longspeak
    Dec 24 '18 at 20:51
















Who gave away the 8 cents?
– hat
Dec 24 '18 at 16:16




Who gave away the 8 cents?
– hat
Dec 24 '18 at 16:16












@hat The third person I would think
– deep thought
Dec 24 '18 at 16:18




@hat The third person I would think
– deep thought
Dec 24 '18 at 16:18












@hat the third person gave them money for thanks
– Dear
Dec 24 '18 at 16:58




@hat the third person gave them money for thanks
– Dear
Dec 24 '18 at 16:58












Can you verify each man ate the same amount of bread?
– Longspeak
Dec 24 '18 at 20:51




Can you verify each man ate the same amount of bread?
– Longspeak
Dec 24 '18 at 20:51










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















14














They should




not divide it 5:3, as you might think, but rather 7:1.




The reason being




Although the first person provided 5 loaves and the second person 3, they each also ate some of their own loaves. If we assume they each ate an equal amount, then they each ate 8/3. So, the first person really provided 5 - 8/3 = 7/3, and the second person provided just 3 - 8/3 = 1/3. So, out of the 8 cents the third person gave, the first person should get 7 cents, and the second person 1.







share|improve this answer





















  • Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
    – MooseBoys
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:26












  • @MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:38





















-4














really the answer is simple, given that the question is how should they divide the money to be fair? referring to the first 2 people, to which the first one contributed 5 loaves and the second 3 = 8 loaves and they decided to INVITE a third person which in gratitude gave them 8 cents. based on the only information that at the beginning were two people who together had 8 loaves and invited a third person and NEVER specified how much each one ate, but nevertheless if they specify that among the 3 they ate all 8 loaves and there is a gratification of 8 cents for the first 2 people. so each of the first person gets 1 cent for each bread contributed, the first person contributed 5 loaves of bread and 5 cents, the second person contributed 3 loaves of bread and 3 cents






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
    – Nick Kennedy
    Dec 24 '18 at 22:38











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









14














They should




not divide it 5:3, as you might think, but rather 7:1.




The reason being




Although the first person provided 5 loaves and the second person 3, they each also ate some of their own loaves. If we assume they each ate an equal amount, then they each ate 8/3. So, the first person really provided 5 - 8/3 = 7/3, and the second person provided just 3 - 8/3 = 1/3. So, out of the 8 cents the third person gave, the first person should get 7 cents, and the second person 1.







share|improve this answer





















  • Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
    – MooseBoys
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:26












  • @MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:38


















14














They should




not divide it 5:3, as you might think, but rather 7:1.




The reason being




Although the first person provided 5 loaves and the second person 3, they each also ate some of their own loaves. If we assume they each ate an equal amount, then they each ate 8/3. So, the first person really provided 5 - 8/3 = 7/3, and the second person provided just 3 - 8/3 = 1/3. So, out of the 8 cents the third person gave, the first person should get 7 cents, and the second person 1.







share|improve this answer





















  • Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
    – MooseBoys
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:26












  • @MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:38
















14












14








14






They should




not divide it 5:3, as you might think, but rather 7:1.




The reason being




Although the first person provided 5 loaves and the second person 3, they each also ate some of their own loaves. If we assume they each ate an equal amount, then they each ate 8/3. So, the first person really provided 5 - 8/3 = 7/3, and the second person provided just 3 - 8/3 = 1/3. So, out of the 8 cents the third person gave, the first person should get 7 cents, and the second person 1.







share|improve this answer












They should




not divide it 5:3, as you might think, but rather 7:1.




The reason being




Although the first person provided 5 loaves and the second person 3, they each also ate some of their own loaves. If we assume they each ate an equal amount, then they each ate 8/3. So, the first person really provided 5 - 8/3 = 7/3, and the second person provided just 3 - 8/3 = 1/3. So, out of the 8 cents the third person gave, the first person should get 7 cents, and the second person 1.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 24 '18 at 16:23









deep thoughtdeep thought

2,9821734




2,9821734












  • Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
    – MooseBoys
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:26












  • @MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:38




















  • Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
    – MooseBoys
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:26












  • @MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
    – deep thought
    Dec 24 '18 at 21:38


















Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
– MooseBoys
Dec 24 '18 at 21:26






Before the third person was going to join, one person was going to eat 5 loaves and the other 3 loaves. Why would the introduction of a third person mean they're going to eat the same amount? I'd expect the 5-loaf person to give 5/3 loaves, and the 3-loaf person 3/3 loaves. The ratio of bread given is then 5:3, as is the correct division of the money.
– MooseBoys
Dec 24 '18 at 21:26














@MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
– deep thought
Dec 24 '18 at 21:38






@MooseBoys - On the other hand, maybe they were planning on eating four each. And if not, who says they gave 8/3 to the third guy. And where do they find three cent loaves of bread anyway! Perhaps there is a creative and funny alternative way to answer this question :-)
– deep thought
Dec 24 '18 at 21:38













-4














really the answer is simple, given that the question is how should they divide the money to be fair? referring to the first 2 people, to which the first one contributed 5 loaves and the second 3 = 8 loaves and they decided to INVITE a third person which in gratitude gave them 8 cents. based on the only information that at the beginning were two people who together had 8 loaves and invited a third person and NEVER specified how much each one ate, but nevertheless if they specify that among the 3 they ate all 8 loaves and there is a gratification of 8 cents for the first 2 people. so each of the first person gets 1 cent for each bread contributed, the first person contributed 5 loaves of bread and 5 cents, the second person contributed 3 loaves of bread and 3 cents






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
    – Nick Kennedy
    Dec 24 '18 at 22:38
















-4














really the answer is simple, given that the question is how should they divide the money to be fair? referring to the first 2 people, to which the first one contributed 5 loaves and the second 3 = 8 loaves and they decided to INVITE a third person which in gratitude gave them 8 cents. based on the only information that at the beginning were two people who together had 8 loaves and invited a third person and NEVER specified how much each one ate, but nevertheless if they specify that among the 3 they ate all 8 loaves and there is a gratification of 8 cents for the first 2 people. so each of the first person gets 1 cent for each bread contributed, the first person contributed 5 loaves of bread and 5 cents, the second person contributed 3 loaves of bread and 3 cents






share|improve this answer



















  • 2




    Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
    – Nick Kennedy
    Dec 24 '18 at 22:38














-4












-4








-4






really the answer is simple, given that the question is how should they divide the money to be fair? referring to the first 2 people, to which the first one contributed 5 loaves and the second 3 = 8 loaves and they decided to INVITE a third person which in gratitude gave them 8 cents. based on the only information that at the beginning were two people who together had 8 loaves and invited a third person and NEVER specified how much each one ate, but nevertheless if they specify that among the 3 they ate all 8 loaves and there is a gratification of 8 cents for the first 2 people. so each of the first person gets 1 cent for each bread contributed, the first person contributed 5 loaves of bread and 5 cents, the second person contributed 3 loaves of bread and 3 cents






share|improve this answer














really the answer is simple, given that the question is how should they divide the money to be fair? referring to the first 2 people, to which the first one contributed 5 loaves and the second 3 = 8 loaves and they decided to INVITE a third person which in gratitude gave them 8 cents. based on the only information that at the beginning were two people who together had 8 loaves and invited a third person and NEVER specified how much each one ate, but nevertheless if they specify that among the 3 they ate all 8 loaves and there is a gratification of 8 cents for the first 2 people. so each of the first person gets 1 cent for each bread contributed, the first person contributed 5 loaves of bread and 5 cents, the second person contributed 3 loaves of bread and 3 cents







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 25 '18 at 8:40









Mohammad Zuhair Khan

1336




1336










answered Dec 24 '18 at 19:05









LeonardoLeonardo

1




1








  • 2




    Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
    – Nick Kennedy
    Dec 24 '18 at 22:38














  • 2




    Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
    – Nick Kennedy
    Dec 24 '18 at 22:38








2




2




Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
– Nick Kennedy
Dec 24 '18 at 22:38




Please see meta.stackexchange.com/questions/13676/… regarding non-English language posts on stackexchange websites.
– Nick Kennedy
Dec 24 '18 at 22:38


















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