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POTD [modified]

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • A Amar Chaudhary

    how about climbing one rope and cut another :laugh: or using ladders ;P

    it is good to be important but it is more important to be good

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    Mike_V
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    That's the point. But then you could only get up to 100'2" of rope. You can get more than that. And no ladders! :laugh: Mike

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    • M Mike_V

      Puzzle of the Day You are in a rectangular room with a 100ft tall ceiling. Hanging from the ceiling, right next to one another, are two golden 100ft ropes. You have scissors that can cut through rope. Your goal is to get as much of the valuable rope as possible, but you cannot fall more than two inches. (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :)) Assume that you are zero-height. Or alternately, assume that the 100ft ropes end at the highest point your arms can reach. In other words, no fair cutting off 5'11" of rope standing on the ground just because you happen to be able to reach that high. Good luck! [edit]The scissors cannot leave your hand[/edit]

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      Amar Chaudhary
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      i find the answer (google) but wont share it let other use their brains /google which ever they prefer :laugh:

      it is good to be important but it is more important to be good

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      • M Mike_V

        Puzzle of the Day You are in a rectangular room with a 100ft tall ceiling. Hanging from the ceiling, right next to one another, are two golden 100ft ropes. You have scissors that can cut through rope. Your goal is to get as much of the valuable rope as possible, but you cannot fall more than two inches. (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :)) Assume that you are zero-height. Or alternately, assume that the 100ft ropes end at the highest point your arms can reach. In other words, no fair cutting off 5'11" of rope standing on the ground just because you happen to be able to reach that high. Good luck! [edit]The scissors cannot leave your hand[/edit]

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        S Douglas
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        That's easy; tell the MS Office team that getting any rope is impossible. By the end of the day you will have 300 feet of rope. :)


        I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:

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        • S S Douglas

          That's easy; tell the MS Office team that getting any rope is impossible. By the end of the day you will have 300 feet of rope. :)


          I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:

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          Mike_V
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          :laugh: Love your sig!

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          • M Mike_V

            Puzzle of the Day You are in a rectangular room with a 100ft tall ceiling. Hanging from the ceiling, right next to one another, are two golden 100ft ropes. You have scissors that can cut through rope. Your goal is to get as much of the valuable rope as possible, but you cannot fall more than two inches. (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :)) Assume that you are zero-height. Or alternately, assume that the 100ft ropes end at the highest point your arms can reach. In other words, no fair cutting off 5'11" of rope standing on the ground just because you happen to be able to reach that high. Good luck! [edit]The scissors cannot leave your hand[/edit]

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            Christian Graus
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            Mike_V wrote:

            (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :))

            Did you mean to say about 8 cm ? I'd climb up one, cut the other.  I'd slide down about half way, and tie a loop in the one I was on.  I'd feed the other one through, and then cut below the loop.  Then, I'd lower myself to the ground and pull the rope down, netting me 150 ft of rope. <edit> Actually, I can't climb rope at all, so I'd be stuck with whatever I could reach... </edit>

            Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

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            • C Christian Graus

              Mike_V wrote:

              (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :))

              Did you mean to say about 8 cm ? I'd climb up one, cut the other.  I'd slide down about half way, and tie a loop in the one I was on.  I'd feed the other one through, and then cut below the loop.  Then, I'd lower myself to the ground and pull the rope down, netting me 150 ft of rope. <edit> Actually, I can't climb rope at all, so I'd be stuck with whatever I could reach... </edit>

              Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

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              Mike_V
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              Good, but you can do better.

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              • M Mike_V

                Puzzle of the Day You are in a rectangular room with a 100ft tall ceiling. Hanging from the ceiling, right next to one another, are two golden 100ft ropes. You have scissors that can cut through rope. Your goal is to get as much of the valuable rope as possible, but you cannot fall more than two inches. (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :)) Assume that you are zero-height. Or alternately, assume that the 100ft ropes end at the highest point your arms can reach. In other words, no fair cutting off 5'11" of rope standing on the ground just because you happen to be able to reach that high. Good luck! [edit]The scissors cannot leave your hand[/edit]

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                Bradml
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                var Rope1 as First_Rope; var Rope2 as Second_Rope; I would climb to the top, cut Rope1 down. Then thread Rope1 through the holes in the scissors and loosely tie it to Rope2. Then when I was 1/6 of a foot from the bottom of Rope2 I would pull the rope attached to the scissors (Rope1). Thus I would have both Ropes.


                Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                • B Bradml

                  var Rope1 as First_Rope; var Rope2 as Second_Rope; I would climb to the top, cut Rope1 down. Then thread Rope1 through the holes in the scissors and loosely tie it to Rope2. Then when I was 1/6 of a foot from the bottom of Rope2 I would pull the rope attached to the scissors (Rope1). Thus I would have both Ropes.


                  Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                  Amar Chaudhary
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  Bradml wrote:

                  oosely tie it to the rope.

                  wow it will not open when you are hanging to it and you can break just by pulling it no not a valid solution but you give me an idea i will set scissors in such away that it will cut both ropes when the first rope is pulled i came down with second rope and after reaching ground pull the first one and we have them all here so wanna share :laugh:

                  it is good to be important but it is more important to be good

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                  • A Amar Chaudhary

                    Bradml wrote:

                    oosely tie it to the rope.

                    wow it will not open when you are hanging to it and you can break just by pulling it no not a valid solution but you give me an idea i will set scissors in such away that it will cut both ropes when the first rope is pulled i came down with second rope and after reaching ground pull the first one and we have them all here so wanna share :laugh:

                    it is good to be important but it is more important to be good

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    Bradml
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    I have slightly untangled that mess I call a post. Basically I cut one rope, then use it to cut the other one by attaching scissors to it and then pulling. Simple really:confused:.


                    Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                    • B Bradml

                      var Rope1 as First_Rope; var Rope2 as Second_Rope; I would climb to the top, cut Rope1 down. Then thread Rope1 through the holes in the scissors and loosely tie it to Rope2. Then when I was 1/6 of a foot from the bottom of Rope2 I would pull the rope attached to the scissors (Rope1). Thus I would have both Ropes.


                      Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                      Christian Graus
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #12

                      What holds the scissors in place so they cut the other rope ? who said the rope was so thin it would thread through the scissors ? ( this feels to me like the right answer, but I'm gonna have to call it, if it is )

                      Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

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                      • B Bradml

                        I have slightly untangled that mess I call a post. Basically I cut one rope, then use it to cut the other one by attaching scissors to it and then pulling. Simple really:confused:.


                        Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                        Mike_V
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        How would the scissors stay in place? Good thinking, but the scissors cannot leave your hand. And you must have the scissors when you are done.

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                        • C Christian Graus

                          What holds the scissors in place so they cut the other rope ? who said the rope was so thin it would thread through the scissors ? ( this feels to me like the right answer, but I'm gonna have to call it, if it is )

                          Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

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                          Mike_V
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #14

                          See my reply above. Good thinking, but I forgot to mention the scissors could not leave your hand (simply because I had never thought of that before. Or you could assume the ropes are further apart than the span of the scissors. Mike

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                          • B Bradml

                            I have slightly untangled that mess I call a post. Basically I cut one rope, then use it to cut the other one by attaching scissors to it and then pulling. Simple really:confused:.


                            Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

                            A Offline
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                            Amar Chaudhary
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #15

                            have you ever noticed how a flag is tied

                            it is good to be important but it is more important to be good

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                            • C Christian Graus

                              What holds the scissors in place so they cut the other rope ? who said the rope was so thin it would thread through the scissors ? ( this feels to me like the right answer, but I'm gonna have to call it, if it is )

                              Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

                              B Offline
                              B Offline
                              Bradml
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #16

                              Christian Graus wrote:

                              What holds the scissors in place so they cut the other rope ?

                              This may be the lack of sleep talking, but: The theory is that the cut rope is affixed to the rope that is still attached to the... 100 foot rectangular room. When the cut rope is pulled the scissors cut the rope that is still atached and the whole lot fall to the ground. Also who said anything about the thickness of the rope? Because i is made of Gold i imagine the rope maker would have made it as thin as possible to keep the cost of production down.


                              Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                              • M Mike_V

                                Puzzle of the Day You are in a rectangular room with a 100ft tall ceiling. Hanging from the ceiling, right next to one another, are two golden 100ft ropes. You have scissors that can cut through rope. Your goal is to get as much of the valuable rope as possible, but you cannot fall more than two inches. (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :)) Assume that you are zero-height. Or alternately, assume that the 100ft ropes end at the highest point your arms can reach. In other words, no fair cutting off 5'11" of rope standing on the ground just because you happen to be able to reach that high. Good luck! [edit]The scissors cannot leave your hand[/edit]

                                C Offline
                                C Offline
                                Christian Graus
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #17

                                How wide is the room ? Do I need the rope to support me when I am 100 ft in the air ?

                                Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

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                                • M Mike_V

                                  How would the scissors stay in place? Good thinking, but the scissors cannot leave your hand. And you must have the scissors when you are done.

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                                  A Offline
                                  Amar Chaudhary
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #18

                                  when the second rope cuts the scissors will fall

                                  it is good to be important but it is more important to be good

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                                  • C Christian Graus

                                    How wide is the room ? Do I need the rope to support me when I am 100 ft in the air ?

                                    Christian Graus - C++ MVP 'Why don't we jump on a fad that hasn't already been widely discredited ?' - Dilbert

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                                    M Offline
                                    Mike_V
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #19

                                    Wide enough so you can't use the walls to your advantage :laugh: And yes, you will need to rely on the rope for support. Assume your hands don't get tired. Mike

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                                    • M Mike_V

                                      Puzzle of the Day You are in a rectangular room with a 100ft tall ceiling. Hanging from the ceiling, right next to one another, are two golden 100ft ropes. You have scissors that can cut through rope. Your goal is to get as much of the valuable rope as possible, but you cannot fall more than two inches. (1/6 of a foot, for you non-Americans :)) Assume that you are zero-height. Or alternately, assume that the 100ft ropes end at the highest point your arms can reach. In other words, no fair cutting off 5'11" of rope standing on the ground just because you happen to be able to reach that high. Good luck! [edit]The scissors cannot leave your hand[/edit]

                                      B Offline
                                      B Offline
                                      Bradml
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #20

                                      How are the ropes strung up? Welded to the roof or what? That is a very important factor.


                                      Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

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                                      • B Bradml

                                        How are the ropes strung up? Welded to the roof or what? That is a very important factor.


                                        Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        Mike_V
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #21

                                        My, are we being particular today! :laugh: The ropes are attached to the roof strongly enough that you cannot remove them that way. No fair pulling on the ropes from the bottom hoping they will break at the top. And they are golden ropes, but the gold is (somehow!) not malleable or ductile like real gold would be. The ropes don't stretch. Mike

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                                        • M Mike_V

                                          My, are we being particular today! :laugh: The ropes are attached to the roof strongly enough that you cannot remove them that way. No fair pulling on the ropes from the bottom hoping they will break at the top. And they are golden ropes, but the gold is (somehow!) not malleable or ductile like real gold would be. The ropes don't stretch. Mike

                                          B Offline
                                          B Offline
                                          Bradml
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #22

                                          No you have missed my point, how are the ropes affixed. Are they strung around a roof beam or is it not tied to anything (rather bolted to the wall or something)?


                                          Brad Australian By contacting your lawyer you negate the right to sue me.

                                          M 1 Reply Last reply
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