mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Puzzles

2 December

The number \(7n\) has 37 factors (including 1 and the number itself). How many factors does \(8n\) have?
There was a typo in this puzzle. It originally read "38 factors" when it was meant to say "37 factors".

Show answer & extension

1 December

The geometric mean of a set of \(n\) numbers can be computed by multiplying together all the numbers then computing the \(n\)th root of the result.
The factors of 4 are 1, 2 and 4. The geometric mean of these is 2.
The factors of 6 are 1, 2, 3, and 6. The geometric mean of these is \(\sqrt{6}\).
The geometric mean of all the factors of today's number is 22.

Show answer

Advent 2020 logic puzzle

It's nearly Christmas and something terrible has happened: you've just landed in a town in the Arctic circle with a massive bag of letters for Santa, but you've lost to instructions for how to get to Santa's house near the north pole. You need to work out where he lives and deliver the letters to him before Christmas is ruined for everyone.
Due to magnetic compasses being hard to use near the north pole, you brought with you a special Advent compass. This compass has nine numbered directions. Santa has given the residents of the town clues about a sequence of directions that will lead to his house; but in order to keep his location secret from present thieves, he gave each resident two clues: one clue is true, and one clue is false.
Here are the clues:
9
"The 4th digit is 4."
"The 8th digit is 4."
4
"The 3rd digit is 1."
"The 4th digit is 7."
10
"The 11th digit is a factor of 888."
"The 11th digit is a factor of 88."
13
"The 3rd digit is 1."
"The 4th digit is 6."
23
"The 10th digit is 4."
"The 10th digit is 3."
1
"The last digit is 1, 9 or 5."
"The last digit is 1."
5
"The 3rd digit is 1."
"The 4th digit is 3."
16
"The 5th digit is 3."
"The 6th digit is 3."
11
"The sequence's length is 2+1+6."
"The sequence's length is 2×1×6."
12
"The 6th to 8th digits are 3, 3, 4."
"The 7th to 9th digits are 3, 3, 4."
2
"The 7th digit is 4."
"The 8th digit is 4."
21
"The 5th digit is 3."
"The 9th digit is 9."
22
"The 9th digit is 9."
"The 10th digit is 4."
17
"The 3rd digit is 1."
"The 4th digit is 9."
15
"The 2nd* digit is 7."
"The 1st digit is 8."
14
"The 1st digit is 7."
"The 2nd digit is 7."
7
"The last digit is not 5."
"The 4th digit is 5."
3
"The 11th digit is a factor of 10."
"The 11th digit is a factor of 321."
6
"The sequence's length is 1+9+2."
"The sequence's length is 1×9×2."
20
"The 5th digit is 3."
"The 5th digit is 4."
19
"5 does not appear."
"5 appears exactly once."
24
"The 3rd digit is 1."
"The 4th digit is 8."
25
18
"The 1st digit is 3, 7 or 8."
"The sequence's length is prime."
8
"The 3rd digit is 1."
"The 4th digit is 2."
You can view the map here.

Show answer

24 December

There are six ways to put two tokens in a 3 by 3 grid so that the diagonal from the top left to the bottom right is a line of symmetry:
Today's number is the number of ways of placing two tokens in a 29 by 29 grid so that the diagonal from the top left to the bottom right is a line of symmetry.

Show answer

23 December

198 is the smallest number that is equal to 11 times the sum of its digits.
Today's number is the smallest number that is equal to 48 times the sum of its digits.

Show answer

22 December

Put the digits 1 to 9 (using each digit exactly once) in the boxes so that the sums are correct. The sums should be read left to right and top to bottom ignoring the usual order of operations. For example, 4+3×2 is 14, not 10. Today's number is the largest number you can make with the digits in the red boxes.
++= 18
+ + +
÷-= 1/2
+ + +
+÷= 3/2
=
24
=
8
=
13

Show answer

Tags: numbers, grids

21 December

There are 3 ways to order the numbers 1 to 3 so that no number immediately follows the number one less that itself:
Today's number is the number of ways to order the numbers 1 to 6 so that no number immediately follows the number one less that itself.

Show answer

20 December

18 can be written as the sum of 3 consecutive (strictly) positive integers: 5 + 6 + 7.
18 can also be written as the sum of 4 consecutive (strictly) positive integers: 3 + 4 + 5 + 6.
18 is in fact the smallest number that can be written as the sum of both 3 and 4 consecutive (strictly) positive integers.
Today's number is the smallest number that can be written as the sum of both 12 and 13 consecutive (strictly) positive integers.

Show answer

Tags: numbers, sums

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
 Most recent collections 

Advent calendar 2024

Advent calendar 2023

Advent calendar 2022

Advent calendar 2021


List of all puzzles

Tags

spheres dice products averages advent shape mean palindromes volume menace decahedra digital products median parabolas addition cryptic crossnumbers bases regular shapes complex numbers quadrilaterals calculus rugby triangles tangents sport axes medians angles scales logic division factors crosswords sets range proportion money combinatorics clocks coins grids folding tube maps remainders perfect numbers determinants floors square roots matrices 2d shapes elections fractions arrows binary differentiation polynomials number indices crossnumbers games probabilty digits people maths square grids tournaments cubics polygons speed odd numbers functions expansions rectangles wordplay sequences probability graphs chalkdust crossnumber coordinates ellipses multiples pascal's triangle consecutive numbers irreducible numbers sum to infinity square numbers doubling christmas prime numbers chess factorials integration pentagons geometry algebra circles the only crossnumber colouring integers unit fractions powers neighbours dates sums albgebra cards digital clocks dominos lines tiling books perimeter star numbers shapes taxicab geometry routes means multiplication gerrymandering triangle numbers time trigonometry area planes hexagons consecutive integers symmetry balancing surds cryptic clues dodecagons quadratics numbers grids ave numbers geometric means even numbers partitions chocolate geometric mean 3d shapes percentages cube numbers squares

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2025