Richard Ingalls
New member
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2021
- Messages
- 3
Note: I am posting this here because it seems to my eyes extremely complicated and I do not think it would fit anywhere else, correct me if I am wrong.
This is an interesting problem that I have created that I can not solve, there are just too many combinations and everything for me to be able to figure this out. I am not even sure whether or not it is possible to solve this problem. Here is the problem;
You must fit 150 people in a room. The room is covered in 100 tiles. Each tile must have a certain number of people on top of it, and there must be between 10 and 25 tiles of each color. There are five colors of tiles: red, green, blue, orange, and brown. Red tiles must have zero people per tile, green tiles must have one person per tile, blue tiles must have two people per tile, orange tiles must have three per tile, and brown must have four per tile. What allowed combination of tiles will work?
I hope someone can either solve this or prove that it can't be.
This is an interesting problem that I have created that I can not solve, there are just too many combinations and everything for me to be able to figure this out. I am not even sure whether or not it is possible to solve this problem. Here is the problem;
You must fit 150 people in a room. The room is covered in 100 tiles. Each tile must have a certain number of people on top of it, and there must be between 10 and 25 tiles of each color. There are five colors of tiles: red, green, blue, orange, and brown. Red tiles must have zero people per tile, green tiles must have one person per tile, blue tiles must have two people per tile, orange tiles must have three per tile, and brown must have four per tile. What allowed combination of tiles will work?
I hope someone can either solve this or prove that it can't be.