mscroggs.co.uk
mscroggs.co.uk

subscribe

Puzzles

1 December

One of the digits of today's number was removed to leave a two digit number. This two digit number was added to today's number. The result was 619.

Largest odd factors

Pick a number. Call it \(n\). Write down all the numbers from \(n+1\) to \(2n\) (inclusive). For example, if you picked 7, you would write:
$$8,9,10,11,12,13,14$$
Below each number, write down its largest odd factor. Add these factors up. What is the result? Why?

Show answer

Square factorials

Source: Woody at Maths Jam
Multiply together the first 100 factorials:
$$1!\times2!\times3!\times...\times100!$$
Find a number, \(n\), such that dividing this product by \(n!\) produces a square number.

Show answer & extension

An arm and a leg

If 60% of people have lost an eye, 75% an ear, 80% an arm and 85% a leg, what is the least percentage of people that have lost all four?

Show answer

Blackboard sums II

The numbers 1 to 20 are written on a blackboard. Each turn, you may erase two adjacent numbers, \(a\) and \(b\) (\(a\) is to the left of \(b\)) and write the difference \(a-b\) in their place. You continue until only one number remains.
What is the largest number you can make?

Show answer & extension

Tags: numbers

Blackboard sums

The numbers 1 to 20 are written on a blackboard. Each turn, you may erase two numbers, \(a\) and \(b\) and write the sum \(a+b\) in their place. You continue until only one number remains.
What is the largest number you can make?

Show answer & extension

Tags: numbers

Combining multiples

In each of these questions, positive integers should be taken to include 0.
1. What is the largest number that cannot be written in the form \(3a+5b\), where \(a\) and \(b\) are positive integers?
2. What is the largest number that cannot be written in the form \(3a+7b\), where \(a\) and \(b\) are positive integers?
3. What is the largest number that cannot be written in the form \(10a+11b\), where \(a\) and \(b\) are positive integers?
4. Given \(n\) and \(m\), what is the largest number that cannot be written in the form \(na+mb\), where \(a\) and \(b\) are positive integers?

Show answer & extension

Cross diagonal cover problem

Draw with an \(m\times n\) rectangle, split into unit squares. Starting in the top left corner, move at 45° across the rectangle. When you reach the side, bounce off. Continue until you reach another corner of the rectangle:
How many squares will be coloured in when the process ends?

Show answer

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
 Most recent collections 

Advent calendar 2025

Advent calendar 2024

Advent calendar 2023

Advent calendar 2022


List of all puzzles

Tags

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

Archive

Show me a random puzzle
▼ show ▼
© Matthew Scroggs 2012–2026