Hi,
I came across the following problem in MGMAT cat.
If x is not equal to 0, is |x| less than 1?
(1) x/|x|< x
(2) |x| > x
Answer for this I got is A, which I feel is valid. 'A' directly tells us that |X|>1 and hence we can sufficiently answer the question.
But, the explanation given in the CAT is as follows:
The question "Is |x| less than 1?" can be rephrased in the following way.
Case 1: If x > 0, then |x| = x. For instance, |5| = 5. So, if x > 0, then the question becomes "Is x less than 1?"
Case 2: If x < 0, then |x| = -x. For instance, |-5| = -(-5) = 5. So, if x < 0, then the question becomes "Is -x less than 1?" This can be written as follows:
-x < 1?
or, by multiplying both sides by -1, we get
x > -1?
Putting these two cases together, we get the fully rephrased question:
"Is -1 < x < 1 (and x not equal to 0)"?
Another way to achieve this rephrasing is to interpret absolute value as distance from zero on the number line. Asking "Is |x| less than 1?" can then be reinterpreted as "Is x less than 1 unit away from zero on the number line?" or "Is -1 < x < 1?" (The fact that x does not equal zero is given in the question stem.)
(1) INSUFFICIENT: If x > 0, this statement tells us that x > x/x or x > 1. If x < 0, this
statement tells us that x > x/-x or x > -1. [color=#0000FF]This is not enough to tell us if -1 < x < 1.
(2) INSUFFICIENT: When x > 0, x > x which is not true (so x < 0). When x < 0, -x > x or
x < 0. Statement (2) simply tells us that x is negative. This is not enough to tell us if -1 < x < 1.
(1) AND (2) SUFFICIENT: If we know x < 0 (statement 2), we know that x > -1 (statement 1). This means that -1 < x < 0. This means that x is definitely between -1 and 1.
The correct answer is C[/color].
I would like to differ with the explanation. While option 1 straight forward tells us that |X|>1, the approach in the explanation is complicated.Request your inputs.