- Mon Apr 04, 2022 12:02 pm
#94605
The quickest and best way to answer this question would be to do a main diagram that shows all the possible relationships, SGD2021. I wouldn't want to do a bunch of local diagrams testing each answer choice here, as that is almost never an efficient approach.
I happen to think this is a great game for drawing templates, and there would be three of them. In one template, S and T would both be before H, and then H before R. Since that also forces T to be before R, T would also have to be before G. This templates would help us to eliminate just one answer choice, answer B, because we can see that H and R could be 4th and 5th.
Another template would put G before T, triggering the second rule. In that case, with H before R, and R, S, and G all before T, T would have to be last, and the 4th variable could be anything other than H. That eliminates answers A and C.
Finally, a template in which S and T are both after H but T is before G, so that the second rule is not triggered. So H would be first, R and S could be anywhere after that, and T could be anywhere after H and before G. This eliminates answer D, because if G is last then any of R, S, or T could be 4th.
Try drawing those templates out and see how helpful they are once you get to the questions! The key to making this a template game, in my opinion, is the binary nature of the last rule. There are only two options - either H is before S and T, or else it is after S and T. From there, lots of other things fall into place, and all the solutions can be accounted for within those three diagrams.
Adam M. Tyson
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