How Can Four Women Cross a Bridge in 17 Minutes?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Inkcoder
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Brain Interview
AI Thread Summary
The Microsoft interview question involves getting four women across a bridge in 17 minutes using a flashlight, with varying crossing times. The optimal strategy is for Woman 1 and Woman 2 to cross first, followed by Woman 1 returning with the flashlight. Then, Women 3 and 4 cross together, and Woman 2 returns with the flashlight. Finally, Women 1 and 2 cross again, totaling exactly 17 minutes. This problem highlights the importance of strategic planning and time management in problem-solving scenarios.
Inkcoder
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
A question that was asked in a Microsoft Interview:

There are 4 women who want to cross a bridge. They all begin on the same side. You have 17 minutes to get all of them across to the other side. It is night. There is one flashlight. A maximum of two people can cross at one time. Any party who crosses, either 1 or 2 people, must have the flashlight with them. The flashlight must be walked back and forth, it cannot be thrown, etc. Each woman walks at a different speed. A pair must walk together at the rate of the slower woman's pace.

Woman 1: 1 minute to cross
Woman 2: 2 minutes to cross
Woman 3: 5 minutes to cross
Woman 4: 10 minutes to cross

For example if Woman 1 and Woman 4 walk across first, 10 minutes have elapsed when they get to the other side of the bridge. If Woman 4 then returns with the flashlight, a total of 20 minutes have passed and you have failed the mission. What is the order required to get all women across in 17 minutes?

I'm still working it, and Google most likely holds the answer but try to figure it out on your own.
-Austin
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Not too bad.

Solution.
1,2 go across. 1 comes back. 5,10 go across. 2 comes back. 1,2 go across. (2 + 1 + 10 + 2 + 2 = 17)[/color]
 
This problem took me a while but once you figure it out, you'll kick yourself in the butt. Naturally, you think 19 minutes is the time you need for them to all go across but it's actually only 16.

What I thought was that if 10 and 5 go separate, it's 15 minutes which is obviously too much. So knowing this, you know that 5 and 10 must go together. How to do this is:

1,2 go across.
1 goes back.
3,4 go across.
2 goes back.
1 goes across.

This comes out to 2+1+10+2+1 = 16 minutes.[/color]
 
Last edited:
Tone.Tran said:
This problem took me a while but once you figure it out, you'll kick yourself in the butt. Naturally, you think 19 minutes is the time you need for them to all go across but it's actually only 16.

What I thought was that if 10 and 5 go separate, it's 15 minutes which is obviously too much. So knowing this, you know that 5 and 10 must go together. How to do this is:

1,2 go across.
1 goes back.
3,4 go across.
2 goes back.
1 goes across.

This comes out to 2+1+10+2+1 = 16 minutes.[/color]

But 2 has to go with 1 back across, so their trip takes 2 minutes, hence the total time is 17.
 
Woops, my mistake there. 17 is correct.
 
Thread 'In the early days of electricity, they didn't have wall plugs'
Hello scientists, engineers, etc. I have not had any questions for you recently, so have not participated here. I was scanning some material and ran across these 2 ads. I had posted them at another forum, and I thought you may be interested in them as well. History is fascinating stuff! Some houses may have had plugs, but many homes just screwed the appliance into the light socket overhead. Does anyone know when electric wall plugs were in widespread use? 1906 ad DDTJRAC Even big...
https://unionrayo.com/en/traffic-lights-color-white-autonomous-cars/ In this article, traffic researchers looking to improve traffic flow via autonomous cars and a 4th white light on the traffic light to signal that autonomous cars are controlling the light please follow their lead. Cue the Outer Limits theme song: “Do not attempt to control your television. We control the horizontal. We control the vertical. …”
Back
Top