- Wed Aug 13, 2014 5:54 pm
#15908
Hi Arielle,
Thanks for your question and welcome to the forum! It would help if you could be a little more specific about where exactly you get tripped up on these setups and let us know your thought process. But I'll try to explain the Not Laws in drills #1 & #2:
For drill #1, we know that P is assigned a lower numbered lane than K and K is assigned a lower numbered lane than J. That gives us the P > K > J sequence. Since J has to have at least two variables before him (P & K), that means J cannot go in lanes 1 or 2. Since P has to have at least two variables after him (K & J), that means P cannot go in lanes 5 or 6. Since K has to have at least one variable before her (P) and at least one variable after her (J), K can go neither 1st nor last (lane 6).
For drill #2, we know that A is two places before D (A __ D). This means that D must have at least two variables (A and __) before it so D cannot go 1st or 2nd. Similarly, A must have at least two variables after it (__ & D) so it can go neither 4th nor 5th. Since the A__D block can only go in three locations (1&3, 2&4, 3&5), you can draw out templates to show each of those three options, as they did at the bottom of page 3-106. In each of these options, you can narrow down where E goes since E cannot go next to D. From these options, we see that no matter where the A__D block is, E can never go 3rd or 4th.
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey