A traveler happened upon a village of huts, laid out as the circles in the picture below. The village's mayor explained to the traveler that the family living in each of the huts had an eldest son whose age was unique within the village. (No two eldest sons had the same age.) How interesting, replied the traveler. Tell me this: of all the male children here, what is the age of the very oldest?
The mayor thought for a moment and replied, well I guess I could tell you that none of them are yet of voting age (21), and I guess you might be interested to hear that there are no gaps in their collective ages. But all of that wouldn't be enough information. I think it would be better for you to just knock on all the doors and ask.
I don't have time for that, replied the traveler, and I'm really not that interested. Well, here's an interesting thing about our village, replied the mayor. You may have noticed, our huts are laid out so that many rows of 3, 4, or 5 huts cut across the entire village. Just ask at the huts along any of those rows. Add the ages that you hear, and divide the sum by two. That way you will learn the age of the oldest son in the village.
And now, without knocking on any doors, you can learn it too.
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bonanova
With a nod to jasen's recent and interesting puzzle,
A traveler happened upon a village of huts, laid out as the circles in the picture below. The village's mayor explained to the traveler that the family living in each of the huts had an eldest son whose age was unique within the village. (No two eldest sons had the same age.) How interesting, replied the traveler. Tell me this: of all the male children here, what is the age of the very oldest?
The mayor thought for a moment and replied, well I guess I could tell you that none of them are yet of voting age (21), and I guess you might be interested to hear that there are no gaps in their collective ages. But all of that wouldn't be enough information. I think it would be better for you to just knock on all the doors and ask.
I don't have time for that, replied the traveler, and I'm really not that interested. Well, here's an interesting thing about our village, replied the mayor. You may have noticed, our huts are laid out so that many rows of 3, 4, or 5 huts cut across the entire village. Just ask at the huts along any of those rows. Add the ages that you hear, and divide the sum by two. That way you will learn the age of the oldest son in the village.
And now, without knocking on any doors, you can learn it too.
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