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Questions tagged [mathematics]

A puzzle related to mathematical facts and objects, whose solution needs mathematical arguments. General mathematics questions are off-topic but can be asked on Mathematics Stack Exchange.

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0 votes
4 answers
243 views

If $2026\underbrace{!!\cdots!}_{n\text{ times}}=$ ...
Thirdy Yabata's user avatar
-7 votes
0 answers
64 views

Is it possible to place exactly one positive integer in each shape such that the following conditions hold? Only the number $1$ is repeated. Each dodecagon's number is the product of the numbers in ...
designer's user avatar
11 votes
7 answers
797 views

Can a 10 * 10 square be paved with 1*4 rectangular stone plates? I seek a very intuitive and simple answer to this puzzle. P.S. Will post the source later. The source contains the answer but it is not ...
Hemant Agarwal's user avatar
15 votes
3 answers
623 views

Along her journey, the chicken asked an indecisive donkey, “Can I do it?” After a long deliberation, the donkey finally answered: “Seek the Still Green Desert. The skeleton upon the dune has your ...
vallev's user avatar
  • 571
5 votes
1 answer
233 views

My Dad loves math riddles. He said to me, “You know your late Grandma and her first cousin were both born in the same year and on a Friday. Grandma Hannah Prime was several months older than her first ...
RogerA's user avatar
  • 10.2k
1 vote
1 answer
225 views

A positive integer is a fake palindrome if it is not a palindrome but its prime divisors are precisely those of the number written backwards. a) Find the first dozen fake palindromes. b) Are there ...
Bernardo Recamán Santos's user avatar
-2 votes
0 answers
84 views

I'm trying to implement the classic Combination Sum problem in JavaScript: Given: candidates = [2, 3, 6, 7] target = 7 I want to get: [ [2, 2, 3], [7] ] I’m mainly confused about: how to avoid ...
Jake T's user avatar
  • 143
13 votes
3 answers
2k views

I was exploring digit patterns and wondered whether there are positive integers whose sum of digits is exactly equal to their product of digits. For example, for 123: Digit sum = 1 + 2 + 3 = 6 Digit ...
Jake T's user avatar
  • 143
4 votes
2 answers
545 views

Let "attacking" mean protecting, but everyone says "attacking"... Let $Q$ be a chess position with $q$ non-attacking queens, $R$ one with $r$ rooks, $B$ $b$ bishops, $N$ $n$ ...
Hauke Reddmann's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
105 views

You need to find a side view of B) nacrt=front view tlocrt=top view. You also need to draw the 3d model. I got this puzzle from my teacher in school.
user116521's user avatar
17 votes
2 answers
2k views

Here is a sequence I happened to work out, although I am certainly not the first one. Can you fill in the missing numbers? 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 20, ?, ?, ?, ? NB: The sequence ends after the last ...
Anchises's user avatar
  • 421
12 votes
6 answers
2k views

Here is a classical mathematical puzzle: In the middle of a square pond lies a square island (whose sides are aligned with the sides of the pond). On the island is a tower with a princess locked ...
MathAdmirer's user avatar
13 votes
2 answers
591 views

The diagram shows a regular pentagram inscribed in a parabola. Can another red pentagon (congruent to the one shown) fit in the gray region?
Dan's user avatar
  • 5,205
1 vote
5 answers
558 views

Find all integers n such that the sum of the factorials of its digits equals ⌊√n⌋. For example, if n=2025, then 2!+0!+2!+5!=⌊√2025⌋, although this is not true. How can you find all integers n that ...
Thirdy Yabata's user avatar
-6 votes
7 answers
217 views

You can use addition, multiplication, subtraction, and division as many times as you want but can only use the numbers one time each.
user116346's user avatar

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