Brain Teaser: Solve Chocolate Bar Puzzle in Min Breaks

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The discussion centers around the problem of determining the minimum number of breaks required to split a chocolate bar measuring 6 blocks wide by 9 blocks long into individual blocks. The initial thought was that the answer is 13 breaks, following the formula w + m - 2. However, it was clarified that to separate the blocks, the correct approach is to make w - 1 breaks along the width and m - 1 breaks along the length, leading to a total of (w - 1) + (m - 1) breaks. For the specific case of the 6 by 9 bar, this results in 13 breaks. The conversation also touches on the idea of stacking and breaking the bar again, although this aspect remains less defined. Overall, the key takeaway is the formula for calculating the number of breaks needed to separate a rectangular chocolate bar into individual pieces.
fernanroy
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A friend of mine is really pulling my chain. He said the answer to this was right in front of me. I doubt that! Does anyone have an idea on this?


"I have a bar of chocolate 6 blocks wide by 9 blocks long and I want to split it into its individual blocks making the smallest number of breaks that I can. The breaks that I am allowed to make start on one side and finish on a different side without visiting a third side.


How many breaks must I make?

Can you generalize your answer bard that are to w blocks wide and m blocks long?"
 
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Let's see. The obvious answer is 13, or w+m-2. I'm sure there's a shorter answer. That's the upper limit.
 
Thank You!

DaveC426913 said:
Let's see. The obvious answer is 13, or w+m-2. I'm sure there's a shorter answer. That's the upper limit.

Makes sense now that I look at it! Would you elaborate w+m-2?
 
fernanroy said:
Would you elaborate w+m-2?
To break something into 6 pieces, you to need to make 5 breaks.

So, specifically: 9-1 + 6-1, or generally: w-1 + m-1.
 
DaveC426913 said:
To break something into 6 pieces, you to need to make 5 breaks.

So, specifically: 9-1 + 6-1, or generally: w-1 + m-1.

YES! Thanks so much! I appreciate it!
 
Hmm, what about breaking it then stacking it and breaking it again? How thick is this bar?
 
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