Solving mental maths questions is much
easier than you'd think if you break each puzzle down. Mental arithmetic can be
faster (not to mention more impressive) than using your phone – all it takes is
a few tricks.
"Calculate
left-to-right in
your head, not right-to-left
as you might on paper," says "MatheMagician"
Arthur Benjamin, co-author of Secrets of Mental Math (Three Rivers Press).
"After that, it just takes practice."
Cut the problem into small
bits
Even the most daunting of
mental-arithmetic problems can normally be separated into easy ones – all it
takes is a little addition or subtraction. "For a very simple but
practical example: it's easy to calculate a ten percent tip. How do you calculate a 15 per cent tip?
Well, take the ten per cent tip, cut it
in half and add it to the original. So if the bill is N400,
ten per cent of that is N40, half again is an additional N20.
So 15 per cent of N400=
N60." The same principle
would apply to 17.5 per cent.
Pay attention to
complements
A complement is the distance between a
number and the nearest convenient round number – normally ending in zeroes.
"So the complement of 78 is 22 – it's
the number you add to reach 100," says
Benjamin. "On paper, 1234 minus 678 is messy.
But you start by over-subtracting: 1234 minus 700
equals 534. I've subtracted too much, so I have to add back the
complement. How much was 700 above 678? 22.
You've turned a hard subtraction problem into an easy addition problem: 534 plus 22 equals 556.
Conquer and divide
"If you have a seven-digit number
divided by a three-digit number, the answer is going to be a four-digit number
or possibly one more," says Benjamin. (The same trick can be used when
multiplying – just add instead.) "Therefore, if you were going to calculate
4,000,000 divided by 600, your answer is going to have four digits. Then
simplify it: four-sixths is like two-thirds, which is about 0.667. You know the
length, therefore you know your answer is going to be in the vicinity of
7,000." (It's 6,666.667.)
A tip to be square
Here's a trick to calculate square
numbers quickly. What's 242=?
It's simpler than it looks at first glance: "Go down four to the nearest easy number: 20. To balance it, go up four
to 28. So the first calculation is 20 times 28. Two times 28
= 56, so add the zero and the answer
is 560. You're close. To get the final
result, all you have to do is to add the square of the number you went up or
down – in this case it was four, to get your
answer: 576. So, to summarize, 24 x 24 = (20 x 28) + (4 x 4), which is 576."
Take shortcuts whenever
possible
"There are certain types of
problems for which there are shortcuts to get an answer quickly," says
Benjamin. To multiply any number by 11, add
the sum of its digits and then insert it
between your original numbers. "To work out 53
times 11, you'd add five plus three, so the answer is 583."
To square any two-digit number that ends
in five, the answer will always end in 25.
"You take the first digit and multiply that by its next higher digit.
For example, 352: three times four
equals 12, and it ends in 25. So your answer is 1,225."

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