"If every bow needs the same amount of silk," Petya whispered, "and they made 50 bows in total, how long is each piece?"
Suddenly, Petya’s pencil began to glow. A tiny, ink-stained elf named Digit hopped onto the page. "If every bow needs the same amount of
"Now," Digit said, pointing at the number 50. "You have 200 meters, and you need to make 50 bows. How do we split the mountain?" Petya remembered his division: 200 ÷ 50 = "You have 200 meters, and you need to make 50 bows
The ink-elf vanished back into the textbook. Petya wrote down the answer clearly, feeling like a math hero. When the town fair finally arrived, he saw the 50 bows decorating the square and knew exactly how much silk it took to make them. When the town fair finally arrived, he saw
Once upon a time in the Sunny Town School, a fourth-grader named Petya sat staring at in his Moro and Bantova math book. The problem felt like a riddle from a grumpy wizard.
To help you double-check the specific version of Problem 26 you are working on:
"If every bow needs the same amount of silk," Petya whispered, "and they made 50 bows in total, how long is each piece?"
Suddenly, Petya’s pencil began to glow. A tiny, ink-stained elf named Digit hopped onto the page.
"Now," Digit said, pointing at the number 50. "You have 200 meters, and you need to make 50 bows. How do we split the mountain?" Petya remembered his division: 200 ÷ 50 =
The ink-elf vanished back into the textbook. Petya wrote down the answer clearly, feeling like a math hero. When the town fair finally arrived, he saw the 50 bows decorating the square and knew exactly how much silk it took to make them.
Once upon a time in the Sunny Town School, a fourth-grader named Petya sat staring at in his Moro and Bantova math book. The problem felt like a riddle from a grumpy wizard.
To help you double-check the specific version of Problem 26 you are working on: