Mathcounts Toolbox PDF
Mathcounts Toolbox PDF
Mathcounts Toolbox PDF
TOOLBOX
Facts, Formulas and Tricks
13 = 1 23 = 8 33 = 27 43 = 64 53 = 125
63 = 216 73 = 343 83 = 512 93 = 729 103 = 1000
V. FORMULAS
Perimeter: Volume:
Triangle p=a+b+c Cube V = s3
Square p = 4s Rectangular Prism V = lwh.
Rectangle p = 2l + 2w Cylinder V = πr2h
Circle (circumference) c = 2πr Cone V = (1/3)πr2h
c = πd Sphere V = (4/3)πr3
Pyramid V = (1/3)(area of base)h.
Area:
Rhombus A = (½)d1d2 Circle A = πr2
Square A = s2 Triangle A = (½)bh.a
Rectangle A = lw = bh Right Triangle A = (½)l1l2
Parallelogram A = bh Equilateral Triangle A = (¼) s2 3
Trapezoid A = (½)(b1 + b2)h.
D= 1x 2 − x1 6 +1y
2
2 − y1 6 2
Midpoint Formula: midpoint of a line segment given two endpoints (x1, y1) and (x2, y2)
x + x y1 + y2
2
1 2
,
2
Circles:
x 12πr 6 , where x is the measure of the central angle of the arc
Length of an arc =
360
x 3πr 8 , where x is the measure of the central angle of the sector
Area of a sector =
360
2
Permutations (number of groupings when the order of the items in the groups matters):
N!
Number of permutations = , where N = # of total items and R = # of items being chosen
( N − R)!
Sum of the Measures of the Interior Angles of a Regular Polygon with N Sides = (N − 2)180
Heron’s Formula:
For any triangle with side lengths a, b and c, Area = s( s − a )( s − b)( s − c) , where s = ½(a + b + c)
Pythagorean Triples: Integer-length sides for right triangles form Pythagorean Triples – the largest
number must be on the hypotenuse. Memorizing the bold triples will also lead to other triples that are
multiples of the original.
3 4 5 5 12 13 7 24 25
6 8 10 10 24 26 8 15 17
9 12 15 15 36 39 9 40 41
60°
b
MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 43
a x
Geometric Mean: = therefore, x2 = ab and x = ab
x b
360
Regular Polygon: Measure of a central angle = , where n = number of sides of the polygon
n
360
Measure of vertex angle = 180 − , where n = number of sides of the polygon
n
Ratio of Two Similar Figures: If the ratio of the measures of corresponding side lengths is A:B,
then the ratio of the perimeters is A:B, the ratio of the areas is A 2 : B 2 and the ratio of the
volumes is A 3 : B 3 .
1 61 6
Difference of Two Squares: a 2 − b 2 = a − b a + b
Example: 12 2 − 9 2 = 112 − 96112 + 96 = 3 ⋅ 21 = 63
144 − 81 = 63
Determining the Greatest Common Factor (GCF): 5 Methods
1. Prime Factorization (Factor Tree) – Collect all common factors
2. Listing all Factors
3. Multiply the two numbers and divide by the Least Common Multiple (LCM)
Example: to find the GCF of 15 and 20, multiply 15 × 20 = 300,
then divide by the LCM, 60. The GCF is 5.
4. Divide the smaller number into the larger number. If there is a remainder, divide the
remainder into the divisor until there is no remainder left. The last divisor used is the GCF.
Example: 180 385 25 180 5 25
360 175 25 5 is the GCF of 180 and 385
25 5 0
VI. DEFINITIONS
Irrational Numbers: non-repeating, non-terminating decimals; can’t be written as a ratio of two integers
(i.e. 7 , π )
Common Fraction: a fraction in lowest terms (Refer to “Forms of Answers” in the MATHCOUNTS
School Handbook for a complete definition.)
Equation of a Line:
A
Standard form: Ax + By = C with slope = −
B
Slope-intercept form: y = mx + b with slope = m and y-intercept = b
Regular Polygon: a convex polygon with all equal sides and all equal angles
1 1
Negative Exponents: x − n = and −n
= xn
xn x
Mode = the number(s) occurring the most often; there may be more than one
Measurements:
1 mile = 5280 feet
1 square foot = 144 square inches
1 square yard = 9 square feet
1 cubic yard = 27 cubic feet
VII. PATTERNS
Divisibility Rules:
Number is divisible by 2: last digit is 0,2,4,6 or 8
3: sum of digits is divisible by 3
4: two-digit number formed by the last two digits is divisible by 4
5: last digit is 0 or 5
6: number is divisible by both 2 and 3
8: three-digit number formed by the last 3 digits is divisible by 8
9: sum of digits is divisible by 9
10: last digit is 0
MATHCOUNTS Coaching Kit 45
Sum of the First N Odd Natural Numbers = N 2
Sum of the First N Even Natural Numbers = N 2 + N = N(N + 1)
N
Sum of an Arithmetic Sequence of Integers: × (first term + last term), where N = amount of
2
numbers/terms in the sequence
Find the digit in the units place of a particular power of a particular integer
Find the pattern of units digits: 71 ends in 7
72 ends in 9
(pattern repeats 73 ends in 3
every 4 exponents) 74 ends in 1
75 ends in 7
Divide 4 into the given exponent and compare the remainder with the first four exponents.
(a remainder of 0 matches with the exponent of 4)
Example: What is the units digit of 722?
22 ÷ 4 = 5 r. 2, so the units digit of 722 is the same as the units digit of 72, which is 9.
(n5)2 = n × (n + 1) 2 5 , where n represents the block of digits before the units digit of 5
Examples:
(35)2 = 3×(3+1) 2 5 (125)2 = 12×(12+1) 2 5
= 3×(4) 2 5 = 12×(13) 2 5
=1225 =15625
= 1,225 = 15,625
XI. BASES
%DVH GHFLPDO²RQO\XVHVGLJLWV²
Base 2 = binary – only uses digits 0 – 1
%DVH RFWDO²RQO\XVHVGLJLWV²
Base 16 = hexadecimal – only uses digits 0 – 9, A – F (where A=10, B=11, …, F=15)
Since there is one 64, we have: 1(26) + ?(25) + ?(24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
We now have 125 – 64 = 61 left over, which is one 32 = 25 and 29 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + ?(24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 29, there is one 16 = 24, with 13 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1 (24) + ?(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 13, there is one 8 = 23, with 5 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + ?(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 5, there is one 4 = 22, with 1 left over, so we have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + 1(22) + ?(21)+ ?(20)
In the left-over 1, there is no 2 = 21, so we still have 1 left over, and our expression is:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + 1(22) + 0(21)+ ?(20)
The left-over 1 is one 20, so we finally have:
1(26) + 1(25) + 1(24) + 1(23) + 1(22) + 0(21)+ 1(20) = 11111012
The following is another fun algorithm for converting base 10 numbers to other bases:
Notice: Everything in bold shows the first division operation. The first remainder will be the last digit
in the base n representation, and the quotient is then divided again by the desired base. The process is
repeated until a quotient is reached that is less than the desired base. At that time, the final quotient
and remainders are read downward.
XII. FACTORS
Determining the Number of Factors of a Number: First find the prime factorization (include the 1 if a
factor is to the first power). Increase each exponent by 1 and multiply these new numbers together.
Example: How many factors does 300 have?
The prime factorization of 300 is 22 × 31 × 52 . Increase each of the exponents by 1 and multiply
these new values: (2+1) × (1+1) × (2+1) = 3 × 2 × 3 = 18. So 300 has 18 factors.