top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

To get the most pizza, should you order two 12" pizzas or one 18" pie?

0 votes
72 views
To get the most pizza, should you order two 12" pizzas or one 18" pie?
posted Jun 21, 2023 by Madhavi Latha

Looking for solution? Promote on:
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button




Similar Puzzles
0 votes

To celebrate a party, Akshay placed an order for 9 pizzas which includes brand A and brand B pizzas.
Price of brand A pizza is double that of brand B.
When the order was delivered he found that the number of pizzas of the brands were interchanged and this increased the bill by 25%.
What was the ratio of brand A and brand B pizzas in original order?

+1 vote

Rihana, Peeta, and Logan order a pizza for $10. Out of the three, Rihana and Peeta were quite hungry and ate 6 slices a piece, while Logan had just 2 slices.

Now, they want to split the cost among them fairly but due to the lack of change, they decide to round of the cost to the nearest possible dollar.

Can you find out the fair way which should be used to split the money?

What if the pizza was worth $11?

0 votes

Four members of a band are walking to a night concert.
They decided to take a short-cut, but must cross a bridge.
Luckily they have one flashlight. Because of the varying size of their instruments, it takes each member a different amount of time to cross the bridge - it takes the first person one minute, the second person two minutes, the third person five minutes and the fourth person ten minutes.
They must cross the bridge in pairs, travelling at the slower speed so if the one minute person went with the ten minute person, it would take a total of ten minutes. Since there is only one flashlight, one person must come back across the bridge, then another pair can cross.
They only have 17 minutes to cross the bridge and still get to the concert on time.
What order should they cross to get everyone across and get to the concert?

0 votes

A man has a medical condition that requires him to take two kinds of pills, call them A and B. The man must take exactly one A pill and exactly one B pill each day, or he will die. The pills are taken by first dissolving them in water.

The man has a jar of A pills and a jar of B pills. One day, as he is about to take his pills, he takes out one A pill from the A jar and puts it in a glass of water. Then he accidentally takes out two B pills from the B jar and puts them in the water. Now, he is in the situation of having a glass of water with three dissolved pills, one A pill and two B pills. Unfortunately, the pills are very expensive, so the thought of throwing out the water with the 3 pills and starting over is out of the question. How should the man proceed in order to get the right quantity of A and B while not wasting any pills?

...