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Squares and factoring are also your friend. Joel Send a noteboard - 02/03/2012 03:56:08 AM
X, followed by a zero, X added to results. 25 X 11. 25, followed by zero, 250, added by itself, 250+25 = 275. Excellent!

38 X 11 = 380+38 = 418! Just gotta be good at adding fast

And you can apply that same sort of logic in your head to just about any number, though of course with larger numbers it gets trickier.

Say, 13 x 18, you take ten 18s (180) and add them to three 18s (54) to get 234. You can do that for other two-digit numbers as well. Say, 72 x 44, first you take seven 44s, which to make easier in my head I break down to two 132s (3x44) plus 44, so seven 44s is 308, add a zero, 3080, then add two 44s, or 88, for a final mental math score of 3168. That's no longer as helpful when you get to 1377 x 8513, but that's what paper is for.

You can get a lot of mileage out of them, especially (though not always) when dealing with numbers not particularly close to a round figure. Not terribly useful with 13*18, except to identify 13 as a prime that cannot BE factored, but 13*9*2 is not too bad (though 180+54 or even 20*13-26 are both better.) For 72*44, 2^3*3^2*2^2*11 works pretty well, because then it is just 99*32=3200-32=3168. Beyond a point, as you note, it just becomes too big a pain to remember one set of numbers accurately while mentally playing with a second; people good at blindfolded chess probably do it quite well.

To do 1377*8513 my own approach would be 1400*8500=11,900,000; subtract 23*8500 (195,000)=11,704,500; add 13*1377 (17,901)=11,722,401.

I will not pretend I did all that mentally; I gave it the old college try while outside smoking, but once I got to 11,704,500 I 1) forgot to count the 1000s in 13*1377 and 2) far worse, SUBTRACTED rather than adding the result, so I wound up with 11,700,369. Generally, if I have to track more than 5 or 6 digits while doing a separate operation, it is time to write a few of them down before I forget one.
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Does anybody know this math trick? - 29/02/2012 07:29:58 PM 755 Views
Sure, it's an artifact of base 10 - 29/02/2012 08:24:18 PM 549 Views
Your own fault for doing lots of math. - 29/02/2012 08:37:39 PM 614 Views
More my fault for having a algebra textbook that obsessed with abnormal base calculations - 29/02/2012 09:19:15 PM 608 Views
I think I had one like that one year. - 02/03/2012 04:16:26 AM 756 Views
Your method for 11 might be even quicker! - 29/02/2012 08:46:44 PM 439 Views
I think it's basically the same method, but if not enjoy - 29/02/2012 09:16:21 PM 421 Views
That's what I've always used. - 29/02/2012 09:24:05 PM 437 Views
Squares and factoring are also your friend. - 02/03/2012 03:56:08 AM 568 Views
Yes: I was taught it in school aged 11 or 12. *NM* - 29/02/2012 11:33:22 PM 180 Views
That is wayyyyy more complicated than 10x+x. But if it works for you, I am happy. *NM* - 01/03/2012 07:16:40 AM 198 Views
Not really - 01/03/2012 04:24:20 PM 404 Views
That's, uh... the same thing. - 01/03/2012 08:38:03 PM 378 Views
Again, it's the doing it in your head thing - 01/03/2012 10:27:01 PM 499 Views
Yes. It's called multiplication. *NM* - 02/03/2012 12:40:20 AM 245 Views
Har har har. Why even comment? *NM* - 02/03/2012 05:15:05 AM 181 Views

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