The problem is about an archaeologist who is in mortal danger
The problem is about an archaeologist who is in mortal danger
Anonim

The man was bitten by a snake. Help him deal with the antidote and survive.

The problem is about an archaeologist who is in mortal danger
The problem is about an archaeologist who is in mortal danger

During the expedition, the archaeologist was bitten by a snake. To neutralize her deadly poison, you need to take an antidote. The doctor prescribed two types of pills to the patient: A and B. They are indistinguishable from each other in smell, color and taste. You need to take them one at a time (of each type) daily for 30 days, otherwise a sad end is inevitable.

One morning, the archaeologist took a pill A from a jar. When he began shaking out medicine B from the second jar, his hand trembled and two portions of the antidote fell out of the package at once. Now the victim has three completely identical tablets in the palm of his hand, which have already mixed with each other: one type A and two type B.

If the patient misses any type of medication, he will die. If he uses two pills from one jar at once, he will die. What does an archaeologist need to do to survive? Throwing out these pills and just taking new ones is impossible, because then their quantity will not be enough for the course of treatment.

To the three available samples, the archaeologist needs to add another Type A pill. He now has four servings of medicine: two Type A and two Type B.

Then the archaeologist should take the first tablet, divide it in half, put one half in the left pile, the other in the right. Then do the same with the remaining three portions of drugs. Thus, each pile will contain two halves of tablet A and two halves of tablet B. In other words, a whole tablet A and a whole tablet B.

An archaeologist can accept the left pile on the same day, and the right one the next. And he will remain alive. Checkmate, snake!

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