seremify007
Junior Member
I got it I think...
The thing which probably screwed most people over is 4 variables. The trick is that the Adelaide and Melbourne plant required "exact" numbers (well that's how I interpretted that question) and from there, you can rearrange and subtitute where you would've had a second set of variables.
Can't remember the Q exactly, but I remember I let x = number of units from Plant A which goes to Adelaide and let y = number of units from Plant A which goes to Melbourne. Since Adelaide and Melbourne were the ones which had set requirements (I think it was 40 and 35 from memory?), you could rearrange thse to figure out how many from Plant B would go to either Adelaide or Melbourne.
Sorry if I'm not making any sense ><
The thing which probably screwed most people over is 4 variables. The trick is that the Adelaide and Melbourne plant required "exact" numbers (well that's how I interpretted that question) and from there, you can rearrange and subtitute where you would've had a second set of variables.
Can't remember the Q exactly, but I remember I let x = number of units from Plant A which goes to Adelaide and let y = number of units from Plant A which goes to Melbourne. Since Adelaide and Melbourne were the ones which had set requirements (I think it was 40 and 35 from memory?), you could rearrange thse to figure out how many from Plant B would go to either Adelaide or Melbourne.
Sorry if I'm not making any sense ><