Question:

During the placement season of a class, 21 students got shortlisted for company A, 26 got shortlisted for Company B and 29 got shortlisted for company C and 14 students got shortlisted for both A and B,12 students got shortlisted for A and C and 15 for both B and C. All the companies shortlisted 8 students from the class. Then what is the ratio of number of students who got shortlisted for only B and number of students who got shortlisted for only C?

Updated On: Oct 4, 2024
  • 1:1
  • 1:2
  • 2:3
  • 3:2
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The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

Let the number of students who got shortlisted for all three companies be \( x \).
Using the principle of inclusion and exclusion for the total number of students shortlisted:
\[ 21 + 26 + 29 - 14 - 12 - 15 + x = \text{Total students shortlisted} \]
\[ 21 + 26 + 29 - 14 - 12 - 15 + x = 8 \]
\[ 35 + x = 8 \]
\[ x = 8 - 35 \]
\[ x = -27 \]
There seems to be a mistake in the total count or problem constraints. Based on the final expected total, let's reconsider without exclusions affecting directly.
To find the number of students shortlisted only for Company B and Company C, let's denote:
- Only B: \( B - (A \cap B) - (B \cap C) + (A \cap B \cap C) \)
- Only C: \( C - (A \cap C) - (B \cap C) + (A \cap B \cap C) \)
From the given:
- Shortlisted for B only = \( 26 - 14 - 15 + 8 = 5 \)
- Shortlisted for C only = \( 29 - 12 - 15 + 8 = 10 \)
Thus the ratio is:
\[ \frac{5}{10} = 1:2 \]
Answer: B 1:2
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