114k views
5 votes
The cost of painting a wall that is 5 meters wide and 2 1/2 meters tall is $50. How many square meters can be painted for $1?

please answer asap

User PraAnj
by
4.7k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer: If the a and b of your formula mean how many hours it takes each

person, like a = 2 and b = 1, then the formula gives 3/2 or 1 hour and

30 minutes. This is not reasonable, since one of the painters alone

could do it in 1 hour.

Actually, your formula is UPSIDE DOWN. It should be (a*b)/(a+b).

Here's why.

Let h be the number of hours it takes for the two of them to do it

together. The first person could do it all in a hours, but can paint

only a fraction of the wall working h hours. Assuming a constant rate

of painting, that fraction is h/a. That is, the first painter will

paint h/a of the wall in h hours.

Similarly, the second painter will paint h/b of the wall in that time.

So, when will they be done? When the whole wall is painted, which

happens whenever those 2 fractions add up to 1.

You need to solve the following equation:

(h/a) + (h/b) = 1

h*b + h*a = a*b Multiplying through by a*b

h*(b+a) = a*b Factoring out h

h = (a*b)/(a+b) Dividing both sides by b+a

Okay, now say 3 painters could do it in a hours, b hours or c hours,

respectively. Let h be the number of hours they all must work to get

it all painted. The first painter finishes h/a of the wall in that

amount of time. The other 2 painters manage to paint h/b of the wall

and h/c of the wall in that time. Since h is the time to finish the

job, all 3 of these fractions must add up to the whole wall, or 1.

So you have the equation:

h h h

--- + --- + --- = 1

a b c

Solve this for h (start by multiplying through by a*b*c) and you will

get the generalized formula for 3 painters. It's not the formula you

wrote above but I think you can finish it off.

(I hope this helps. I'm sorry if it's wrong)

User RollRoll
by
4.5k points