I've been pondering this for a few months now and haven't got a clue yet what to do...
Prove that if you have a rectangle and you partition it into smaller rectangles such that every rectangle has at least 1 edge of integer length, then the large rectangle has 1 edge of integer length.
The proof is supposed to be simple by using the fact that in a graph the number of nodes with odd degrees is even, and it's generalized for Rn, but I'm still stuck even on R2...
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Anza Power
I've been pondering this for a few months now and haven't got a clue yet what to do...
Prove that if you have a rectangle and you partition it into smaller rectangles such that every rectangle has at least 1 edge of integer length, then the large rectangle has 1 edge of integer length.
The proof is supposed to be simple by using the fact that in a graph the number of nodes with odd degrees is even, and it's generalized for Rn, but I'm still stuck even on R2...
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