Lamcc83 Wrote:Thanks, Ron. It sounds like the key takeaway for me to is to break up large exponents into smaller, palatable exponents.
Maybe I just need to keep practicing (though I've been at studying for 6 months now), but I'm having a hard time solving the following problem in a timely manner (<2.5 minutes).
If 2x-2x-2=3(213), what is the value of X?
(Sorry, consider the tiny font/subscripts exponents).
I tackled this by breaking up 213 into 26 x 26 x 21. If I take the time to do the arithmetic for that, it still takes me about 120 seconds to get the total of the right side of the equation, 24576. But then I hit a wall with how I should apply this to the left side of the equation in a quick manner. Am I doing too much manual arithmetic on the right side of the equation?
Any advice is appreciated!
There are many existing forum threads about this problem. Here's one:
post16795.html#p16795Also, if you're going to do calculations, you may as well just estimate. E.g., 2^10 = 1024, so you can just say 2^10 = approximately 1000. So, 2^13 is approximately 8000, and so on. (The answer choices to this problem are really, really, really far apart, so these estimates are more than good enough.)
If you can do that, then you can get an answer in substantially less time.