Hi,
I am having trouble grasping the concept of combining inequalities. To list an example problem that was in the All the Quant Guide (#6, page 241):
If a>7, a+4>13, and 2a<30, which of the following must be true...
The possibilities either come down to 7<a<15 or 9<a<15. The explanation for why 9<a<15 is correct is: "If 7 and 9 are both less than a, the limiting factor is the larger value, 9. (If a is greater than both 7 and 9, then overall a is greater than 9)." Is it possible to explain this a bit further? Isn't 7 more "limiting" than 9?
There was a similar example earlier in the chapter: "If x>8, x<17, and x+5<19, what is the range of possible values for x?" I understood why x<14 is more limiting than x<17 but I don't know how the "limiting" works for the prior example.
Also, does the rule change when we are dealing with negative numbers? If there's an example to that, that'd be super helpful as well.
Thank you