Hi
My question is regarding Q14 (in my case) of CAT 5. The problem goes like this:
In which quadrant of the coordinate plane does the point (x, y) lie?
(1) |xy| + x|y| + |x|y + xy > 0
(2) -x < -y < |y|
My doubt is in the solution of the first stem. This is the explanation given by MGMAT
1) SUFFICIENT: The key to evaluating this statement is to see which values of x and y actually satisfy it ("crack the code"). To do so, consider all possibilities for the signs of x and y.
- x > 0, y > 0: The left side becomes xy + xy + xy + xy = 4xy, which is a positive number; the statement is satisfied.
- x < 0, y > 0: The left side becomes xy - xy + xy - xy = 0, so the statement is not satisfied.
- x > 0, y < 0: The left side becomes xy + xy - xy - xy = 0, so the statement is not satisfied.
- x < 0, y < 0: The left side becomes xy - xy - xy + xy = 0, so the statement is not satisfied.
- Either x or y (or both) is 0: The left side becomes 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 = 0, so the statement is not satisfied.
Therefore, statement (1) can be rephrased simply as "Both x and y are positive." The point (x, y) is thus in the first quadrant.
My question is regarding sign of IxyI (first term in first stem)
MGMAT notes clearly state that when evaluating Ix-yI:
if x-y>0 or x>y, then Ix-yI = x-y
if x-y<0 or x<y, then Ix-yI = y-x
Applying same rule to IxyI (first term of the stem 1),
if xy>0 then IxyI should open up as xy
if xy<0 then IxyI should open up as -xy
However, in the solution given above, IxyI is assumed throughout to be positive and open up as "xy".
Can you please clarify, since the solution to stem 1 changes based on this query?
Many Thanks
Stuti