How Can We House Animals in a Zoo Given Specific Rules?

  • Thread starter Thread starter some_one
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around housing two wolves, two tigers, two lions, and two sheep in four cages, adhering to specific rules. It is established that one cage must contain a wolf and a sheep, while no two animals of the same kind can share a cage. Various combinations are explored to determine which arguments about animal pairings are necessarily true, with a focus on finding commonalities among the combinations. The conclusion suggests that at least one cage must contain a lion and a tiger, while also indicating that a fifth cage would not resolve the housing issue. The conversation highlights the complexity of finding solutions and the need for a systematic approach to solve the problem efficiently.
some_one
Messages
78
Reaction score
1
in a zoo there are
2 wolfs
2 tigers
2 lions
2 sheep
we need to house them in four cages (two animals in each cage) by these rules:
A.in one cage we need to house a wolf and a sheep.
B.we can't house two animals of the same kind in one cage.

which one of these arguments in necessarily true:
1.at least in one cage a lion and a tiger will be housed.
2.at exactly one cage a lion and a sheep will be housed.
3.at exactly one cage a tiger and a sheep will be housed.
4.there is another cage in which a sheep and a wolf will be housed.

what is the simplest way to solve this question??

i found one combination for each argument
and tried to find common stuff between them.

regarding answer 1:
|wolf ,sheep |lion,tiger|sheep,lion|wolf,tiger|


regarding answer 2:
|wolf,sheep |sheep,lion|wolf ,tiger|lion,tiger|

regarding answer 3:
|wolf,sheep |sheep,tiger|wolf ,lion|lion,tiger|

regarding answer 4:
if we put a fifth cage it leaves us with 4 animals
we can't put two animals in each one of the four left cages
if we left with only fours animals,so its not possible.

i found that a lion and a tiger in one cage is the common thing among these three combinations.

but i can't think of three combination in order to solve this kind of question
it takes too much time.

is there any easier way??
 
Physics news on Phys.org
1 sheep is with 1 wolf. They're gone. No need to worry about them. So you have

1 sheep
2 tigers
2 lions
1 wolf

To me, it's obvious right away that a lion needs to be a tiger. Anyways, if you it isn't for you, or you want to argue it, then do the following: pick an animal with 2 individuals, lion or tiger here. I choose tiger. Do the following

Tiger ___ | Tiger ___ | ___ ___

You have the fill in the blanks with the remaining animals. Since 2 lions cannot be put together, they cannot be put in the last section, to the right. Therefore at least one must be put on the left, with a tiger.
 
thanks
i understand that
 
Just ONCE, I wanted to see a post titled Status Update that was not a blatant, annoying spam post by a new member. So here it is. Today was a good day here in Northern Wisconsin. Fall colors are here, no mosquitos, no deer flies, and mild temperature, so my morning run was unusually nice. Only two meetings today, and both went well. The deer that was road killed just down the road two weeks ago is now fully decomposed, so no more smell. Somebody has a spike buck skull for their...
Back
Top