roger
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 22, 2002
- Messages
- 11,466
I agree.But that's my complaint! Ambiguity doesn't make for a good open-ended problem, the way I see it. If people are going to debate over an answer, they should at least be responding to the same question!
I actually find the fact that people got so many different answers interesting, though. Surely a lot of that was due to poor math skills. But I think there is a bit of a psychological aspect to it, too - in how somebody responds to the ambiguity. Science types, dominant in this thread, conclude the question is asking about profit, and see no other answer than $20. I'm often a 'glass half empty' person, and if I had executed that transaction in real life, I'd walk away thinking 'Stupid. I should have $30 now, but I only have 20. Dang, I lost 10 bucks in this deal!" Whereas a glass half full person would be thinking "Yay. I made 20 bucks. Ya, I should have held out and got the full 30, but I'm still up $20!!!"
But yes, the problem statement is ambiguous - define it better, and the problem is not 'open ended'.