This is a trick question: if the ends of the object are not connected, you would get 101 pieces. If the object is something like a rubber band with no end piece, you would have 100 pieces.
The answer depends on whether you start off with a open ended object like a strip of paper of a length of fabric, or a closed object like a loop of paper or a doughnut. The answer also depends on whether you can stack pieces that you have already cut for the next cut. For an open ended object and no stacking, you will need 342 cuts.
Wali receives 4 times 9 = 36 pieces of candy
12
Oh, dude, let me break it down for you. So, if you draw three lines in a circle, you can definitely create eight pieces. Each line you draw cuts the circle into two parts, so with three lines, you'll have eight pieces in total. It's like slicing a pizza, but with geometry.
The DENOMINATOR (bottom part) tells you into how many equal pieces you divide one unit. The NUMERATOR (top part) tells you how many of those pieces you actually use.
I think you can make 12 pieces at most
well the answer is 16.
One to Six
an infinite number
16 lol
154 if you want to slice it in 154 peices
With 10 straight cuts, you can create a maximum of 56 pieces of pie. This is based on the formula for the maximum number of pieces ( P(n) = \frac{n(n + 1)}{2} + 1 ), where ( n ) is the number of cuts. For 10 cuts, substituting into the formula gives ( P(10) = \frac{10 \times 11}{2} + 1 = 56 ).
100
Platelets are the cell pieces that form clots and seal up cuts.
If no cut intersects any previous cuts, then you can just slice it into 14 pieces.
2 horizontal cuts and 3 vertical cuts OR 3 horizontal cuts and 2 vertical cuts
9 pieces