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Word Arithmetics - Part 4

© Copyright 1998, Jim Loy

See my other articles on Word Arithmetics:

Here are a few puzzles which look difficult, but which are relatively easy once you have a certain insight.


1.

           ABC
        ------
    DEF)GBEFDH
        GADB
        ----
         IDDD
         IHJA
         ----
          ICFH
          IJHD
          ----
           AEF

The clues are fairly sparse here. There's only one really useful clue, that I notice. AxF=...B and BxF=...A (the first two multiplications). I recall that this happens when F=9. Does it happen for other numbers (where A, B, and F are three distinct numbers)? Let's look at a multiplication table:

      A=  0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
F= 0      0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0
   1      0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9
   2      0  2  4  6  8 10 12 14 16 18
   3      0  3  6  9 12 15 18 21 24 27
   4      0  4  8 12 16 20 24 28 32 36
   5      0  5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45
   6      0  6 12 18 24 30 36 42 48 54
   7      0  7 14 21 28 35 42 49 56 63
   8      0  8 16 24 32 40 48 56 64 72
   9      0  9 18 27 36 45 54 63 72 81

OK, we see that 2x4=8 and 8x4=32 work, too. This gives us a small number of possible permutations:

    A=28234678
    F=44999999
    B=82876432

Solving the puzzle from there is fairly easy.


2.

           AB
        -----
    CDE)FCGDH
        FDCE
        ----
         IFDH
         AJDE
         ----
          AEH

E=0. And BxD ends in D, so either D=5 and B is odd, or D is even and B=6. But, D cannot be 5, as then C would be 5 or 0. So, D is even and B=6. Let's put those into the diagram:

           A6
        -----
    CDE)FCGDH
        FDC0
        ----
         IFDH
         AJD0
         ----
          A0H

We also have C is even, and C>D. There are only three even numbers left, 2, 4, and 8. So, we have 3 possible permutations of C and D:

    C = 4 8 8
    D = 2 2 4

And we can solve for J and A. And the puzzle is easy from there.


3.

           AB
        -----
    ACD)EFCEG
        EBHC
        ----
          IJG

B=0 (for two reasons), and F=1. AxACD=E0HC is 4 digits, with the leftmost digit not being 1. So, A>3, and A is not equal to 5. If A is 4 then AxCD would have to produce a carry of 4, to make B=0. There is no number CD that produces a carry of 4. So, A>5. If A is 9, then AxCD would have to produce a carry of 9, to make B=0. Likewise, there is no CD that produces a carry of 9. So, A is 6, 7, or 8.

If A is 6, then AxCD produces a carry of 4, so C is 7, or 8 (can't be a 6). If A is 7, then AxCD produces a carry of 1, so C is 2. If A is 8, then AxCD produces a carry of 6, so C is 7. Let's list those permutations:

    A = 6 6 7 8
    C = 7 8 2 7

We can deduce D (which would make E0HC end in C. We find that C can't be 7. I now list that info:

    A = 6 6 7 8
    C = 7 8 2 7
    D =   3 6

Now we just see if 6x683=4098 or 7x726=5082 are consistent with E0HC. We find that both of those are consistent. But, we can solve for I and J, and we eliminate one of these answers, and go on to solve the puzzle.


4.

          AB
        ----
    CDE)FGDH
        FIG
        ---
         DJH

B=0. AxCDE=FIG, which is only 3 digits. C>D, so C>1. The permutations which make AxCDE be a 3 digit number, are:

    A = 3 4 2 2 2
    C = 2 2 3 4 4
    D = 1 1 1 1 3

For each of these, we have several values which E (which can't be a 5) can be:

    A = 33333 4444 2222 2222 222
    C = 22222 2222 3333 4444 444
    D = 11111 1111 1111 1111 333
    E = 46789 3789 4789 3789 789

Solving for some of the other letters, eliminates all but 4 permutations:

            *  *     *     *
    A = 33333 4444 2222 2222 222
    C = 22222 2222 3333 4444 444
    D = 11111 1111 1111 1111 333
    E = 46789 3789 4789 3789 789
    G = 28147 2826 8468 6468 468
    J =  3 74  3 5 3753 5 53  75
    I =    25  6 4   4  4 46  24
            *  *     *     *

For, each of these four permutations, we multiply out AxCDE, to see if we get a consistent 3-digit answer: 219x3=657, 217x4=868, 318x2=636, 419x2=838. Only the first is consistent. And we go on to solve the puzzle.


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