3/4
The largest number of pieces is 10. Each time you cut it across you divide the pizza into 2. dividing it by 2, 5 times gives us 10.
Yes. When you cut a pizza into 3 pieces, the pieces are bigger than they are when you cut it into 12 pieces.
A Knife
6 if cut like a normal pizza and 3 if cut without overlapping
One sixth or 1/6...assuming the pizza was cut into 6 slices. If not, then the fraction left would be: (total # of slices cut - 5)/total # of slices cut
No.
A pizza can be cut into eleven pieces with 4 straight cuts if an X is cut, then the rest of the pizza is cut starting from the right and working to the left in four straight lines.
3/4
The largest number of pieces is 10. Each time you cut it across you divide the pizza into 2. dividing it by 2, 5 times gives us 10.
Yes. When you cut a pizza into 3 pieces, the pieces are bigger than they are when you cut it into 12 pieces.
it was cut into 28 pieces
A Knife
6 if cut like a normal pizza and 3 if cut without overlapping
Cut a pizza into 2 using one straight cut. Stack the pieces and make a straight cut: you now have 22 = 4 pieces from 2 cuts. Stack these and make a straight cut: you now have 23 = 8 pieces from 3 cuts. Continue. After 7 cuts you can have 27 = 128 pieces. You can reduce the number of pieces to 29 if, after the fourth cut, you stack and cut only 11 pieces and thereafter cut just one each time. There are other options which give the same result.
From the Papa Ginos Website: large 14" -- cut in 8 pieces small 10" cut in 6 pieces rustic cut in 12 pieces
twelve