Everyone should know that our sixth grade math is more difficult. Sometimes, you have to solve it yourself if you have the ability. Yesterday, I met a difficult problem.
Li Ming has more stamps than Wang Hua 10. If Li Ming gives his own stamps to Wang Hua116, they will have the same number of stamps. How many stamps do they each have?
I read the topic. First, I drew a line graph according to the given conditions. Then, I found that only by giving half of the 65,438+00 stamps that Li Ming gave Wang Hua can Li Ming have as many stamps as Wang Hua. In this case, Li Ming's116 is five. Look again, the denominator of116 is 16, which means that the number of stamps of Li Ming is divided into 16 on average, so Li Ming has16, each of which is 5.
Although I have finished the calculation, I'm still not sure about the answer. Then, I began to check: the number of stamps of Li Ming minus 10 equals 70. This is just an algorithm. We can divide the number of stamps using Li Ming into16; The formula: 80÷ 16=5 (Zhang), "5" means 1 of 16, and then "5× 14+70 (Zhang)" is used. Then "14" is less than Wang Hua 10, that is, 2/ 16, so 16 minus 2 is 14.
Now, I have solved this difficult problem, but I hope there will be more questions to test me in the future, to enrich my knowledge and make my grades better.