Calculator Puzzles, Tricks and Games
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Calculator Puzzles, Tricks and Games - Norvin Pallas
functions.
Upside-Down Displays
Seven of the digits on a calculator, when turned upside down, will make reasonable approximations of letters of the alphabet. Solve the following problems, then read the display upside down to answer the clue. You may want to guess the answer before trying the calculation.
a. The square root of 196 and get a greeting.
b. 440 × 7 and get a musical instrument.
c. 52,043 ÷ 71 and get a snake-like fish.
d. 30,000,000 - 2,457,433 × 2 and find out why a wife may give in to her husband.
e. 7,964² + 7,652,049 and get the name of a large oil corporation.
f. 711 × 10,000 – 9,447 and get a competing oil corporation.
g. 53.5149 – 51.4414 ÷ 29 and find a farmer’s storage place. (NOTE: If your calculator prints a 0 before a decimal point, divide by 2.9 instead of 29.)
h. 15² - 124 × 5 and get a distress signal.
i. 2 – 1.4351 ÷ 7 and get a name for a wolf. (See note on g.)
j. 159 × 357 – 19,025 and get a beautiful young lady.
k. 471 × 265 + 410,699 and learn what a snake does.
l. 99² – 2,087 and get a rise.
m. 1 – .930394 ÷ .9 and get a telephone greeting. (See note on g.)
n. 217 × 121 – 8,550 and get a kind of pop.
o. .161616 ÷ 4 and find out what Santa Claus said when you asked him for a new yacht. (See note on g.)
Answers on page 76
A Few Lines About Nines
Now that you have an electronic calculator, you don’t have to worry about checking your work, right? Wrong, sad to say, since calculators can make mistakes: batteries run down, keys stick, or something goes haywire inside. And of course it is easier to blame the calculator than to admit that we hit a wrong key, or maybe attempted something the machine was not designed to handle. When checking your work, or someone else’s, you may want a quick check to avoid repetition.
The process of casting out 9’s is the traditional method for checking a difficult problem. The basis for this technique is cross-adding, reducing each number in the problem to a smaller number by adding the digits together. Suppose we have the number 891562. We can add it across as follows:
8 + 9 + 1 + 5 + 6 + 2 = 31 = 3 + 1 = 4
Notice that the answer would be just the same if we left the 9 out of the problem:
8 + 1 + 5 + 6 + 2 = 22 = 2 + 2 = 4
What we have done basically is to take out all the 9’s and multiples of 9 throughout the problem, and the number which remains is the equivalent of the remainder in division.
In the problems that follow, the original problem is given at the left, with the answer often reduced to a single digit. In the proof on the right, each number in the original problem is reduced to a single digit, and then we go through the problem just as though this was the original problem.
(Note that if your subtraction yields a negative answer, you must add 9 to complete the proof.)
These proofs will not catch all possible errors. If you copy the problem down wrong, only a miracle can give you the right answer. If you reverse digits in the answer, or misplace the decimal, the proofs will not help. And there is coincidence —perhaps one chance in nine—that your proof will come out if you make an error in more than one digit. Are the proofs still worth while? You be the judge.
Sports Figures
1. The ball is on the Cleveland Browns’ 5-yard line. On the next play the Browns commit a flagrant violation of the rules, which would normally call for a 15-yard penalty. However, there is a special rule that a team may not be penalized more than half the distance to its goal. On the following play the Minnesota Vikings are penalized 15 yards. Then the Browns are penalized, then the Vikings, and so on, while the customers go out for refreshments. Where will the ball eventually land?
2. At the beginning of the baseball season, you make a bet with a friend. For every game the Mudville Nine plays, you will pay him 5¢ when they lose, and he will pay you 7¢ when they win. The season consists of 156 games. When the season is over, you find that you came out exactly even. How many games did the Mudville Nine win?
3. If Babe Ruth hit 60 home runs in 154 games, and Roger Maris hit 61 home runs in 162 games, who had the better record?
Answers on page 76
Hit It!
Here is an absorbing game which you can play with friends, or as a form of calculator solitaire. To begin, have each player put a random five-digit number into his calculator. He then copies this number on a scrap of paper, and exchanges this paper with another player. The object of the game is to be the first player to, strictly by multiplying, make the digits showing on his calculator match the number on the scrap of paper he has received. If the number to be hit is smaller than his original entry in the display, the player can lower it by multiplying by a number less than one, and vice versa. As the player approaches the point where his display matches his target, he must multiply by numbers which are closer and closer to one. The decimal places which appear when multiplying are ignored in the final result, but cannot be ignored by the player as his multiplication proceeds.
When playing against someone else, speed is the object, and it might be a good tactic to close the gap by making many swift multiplications by numbers which don’t change the display a great deal. When you play by yourself, however, you can judge your success by the number of multiplications you perform, rather than the time it takes you. This puts the accent on accuracy rather than speed.
You may want to try to create certain patterns in the display rather than simply hit a random number. Why not attempt to show eight digits in consecutive order in your final display? Or perhaps a pattern, like 12312312 or 24242424, or even 22222222. You can even shoot for your birthday, expressed in eight digits. If you need a zero for the first digit, remember to enter the appropriate decimal point. This won’t affect the multiplication process.
ESP
Extra-sensory perception—the ability to read minds, predict the future, sense distant happenings, influence inanimate objects, and so on—is a subject of much popular speculation, though many scientists discount it. For our purposes, let us assume that your calculator neither possesses nor transmits ESP, and that when we make it appear to do so, we are resorting to trickery.
Tricks may appear different, yet all involve essentially the same principles. There is a