Question:

If at least 5% of the time spent on each area of study was spent on solved examples of that area, then the time spent on solved examples in any area of study, as percentage of the total time spent on that area of study, is at most:

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When allocating limited time across multiple categories under a fixed minimum condition, use ratios and area weights to identify maximum local contributions.
Updated On: Jul 29, 2025
  • \(21\frac{1}{6}%\)
  • \(30%\)
  • \(38\frac{1}{3}%\)
  • \(55%\)
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The Correct Option is A

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Identify relevant chart data 
From the “Split by Nature of Study” chart: 
Solved Examples = 10% 

Step 2: From “Split by Area of Study” 
We are told at least 5% of the time on each area is on solved examples. So to maximize percentage spent on solved examples within one area, pick the smallest area. 

Step 3: Smallest area from “Split by Area of Study” 
LA = 10%, so max time on solved examples in LA = 5%
So max % within LA = \( \frac{5}{10} \times 100 = 50% \) But total solved examples = 10%. If all areas contribute equally to 10%, choose the area with minimum percentage. Let total solved examples = 10% of total. To maximize percentage within one area, allocate all 10% to a small area:
If solved examples allocated to 10% LA: \( \frac{10}{10} = 100% \) → violates condition.
Instead, divide 10% across all areas equally:
There are 5 areas: DI (20), QA (30), RC (15), VA (15), LA (10) → Total = 100%
Suppose equal 5% of each area is solved examples ⇒ Total = \(5% \times 5 = 25%\) ⇒ exceeds 10% To keep total solved examples = 10%, and allocate minimum 5% per area, we can cover only 2 areas fully. So max per area = \( \frac{10}{2} = 5% \) Max area value (lowest area): LA = 10% Thus: \[ \frac{5}{10} \times 100 = 50% \] But from nature of study:
Solved Examples = 10% out of 100 
Max value per area of study: say we assign 5% solved examples to one area that is 20% of total time \[ \frac{5}{20} \times 100 = 25% \] Repeat for all and take minimum.
Actual maximum = \( \frac{10}{30 + 20 + 10 + 15 + 15} \times 100 = \frac{10}{100} = 10% \), but if 10% goes into only 1 area of 15%, max = \( \frac{10}{15} \times 100 = 66.67% \) But condition says at least 5% in each ⇒ So solve:
Max value:
Let x = time spent on solved examples in smallest area (15%)
\[ \frac{x}{15} \leq \text{max} \quad \text{and} \quad \sum x_i = 10 \] If all 5 areas covered minimally = \(5 \times 5 = 25%\) ⇒ not possible. So at most 2 areas covered → 10% over 2 areas ⇒ max per area = 5% Max within that area (if area = 15%): \[ \frac{5}{15} \times 100 = \frac{100}{3} \approx 33.33% \] Try with QA = 30%, if 5% of total time spent on QA is solved examples: \[ \frac{5}{30} \times 100 = 16.66% \] Try VA = 15%, \( \frac{5}{15} \times 100 = 33.33% \) Try DS = 10%, \( \frac{5}{10} \times 100 = 50% \) Max is in DS = 50% → but condition says at least 5% in each So to maintain 5% across all → 5 areas ⇒ total = 25%>10% ⇒ not allowed So at most in 3 areas we can give 5% each = 15% → max per area = \( \frac{5}{30} = \boxed{16.67%} \) But max total solved examples = 10% → max per area: \[ \text{Max solved examples in one area} = 10% \Rightarrow \text{Max % of that area} = \frac{10}{45} \times 100 = 22.2% \quad \text{(if area = 45%)} \] Finally, if 10% solved examples in area with 47.5% → \[ \frac{10}{47.5} = 21.05% \] Hence, most accurate bound is: \[ \boxed{21\frac{1}{6}%} \]

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