- Thu Feb 21, 2013 12:21 am
#7850
Hi, I have a question about a logic game that was discussed in Chapter 9.
The game says,
"A TV executive is deciding the scheduling for 5 ads to be aired during one week - Mon through Fri. No ad contain more than 2 days per week. Exactly 1 ad is scheduled to air each day"
However, the book says that this is not a "1-1-1-1-1-1" balanced scenario.
And I just can't see why -- I am banging my head on the table for this.
Doesn't the scenario specifically state that "Exactly 1 ad is scheduled to air each day" ???? If I were to see this statement on the real LSAT (which I will be taking this June) I would have definitely drawn a table with M,T,W,Th,F as the column, and have put 5 dashes under each day of the week to indicate that EXACTLY 1 ad is scheduled to air each day, just as the constraint states.
Am I terribly mistaken?
Can someone please elaborate this?
How is the above game different from other types of games (in terms of wording) that are actually "balanced" with 1-1 scenario?
Please help!
The game says,
"A TV executive is deciding the scheduling for 5 ads to be aired during one week - Mon through Fri. No ad contain more than 2 days per week. Exactly 1 ad is scheduled to air each day"
However, the book says that this is not a "1-1-1-1-1-1" balanced scenario.
And I just can't see why -- I am banging my head on the table for this.
Doesn't the scenario specifically state that "Exactly 1 ad is scheduled to air each day" ???? If I were to see this statement on the real LSAT (which I will be taking this June) I would have definitely drawn a table with M,T,W,Th,F as the column, and have put 5 dashes under each day of the week to indicate that EXACTLY 1 ad is scheduled to air each day, just as the constraint states.
Am I terribly mistaken?
Can someone please elaborate this?
How is the above game different from other types of games (in terms of wording) that are actually "balanced" with 1-1 scenario?
Please help!