I had a question about Data Sufficiency #99 in the Quantitative Review (2nd ed.) book.
I remember in an earlier practice question that had to do with a circle on a coordinate plane that we were able to find the radius of the circle because we knew that the distance from the center of the circle to coordinate (0,0) (i.e. the point at which two lines tangent to the circle intersect) was r/sqrt(2). Why does this logic not apply to this problem? If we know that the distance from the circle's center is 20, and we know the process for obtaining the side of a square (which is equal to the diameter, or 2r) from that number, why can we not use that in this problem to deduce the radius and, therefore, the distance from the center of the circle to point A?
I don't understand!!