Math, asked by moonlegend6097, 1 year ago

A farmer is returning from market, where he bought a she-goat, a wolf and cabbage. on the way home he must cross a river. his boat is little, allowing him to take only one of the three things. he can't keep the she-goat and the cabbage together (because the she-goat would eat it), nor the she-goat with the wolf (because the she-goat would be eaten). how many minimum trips for the farmer to get everything on the other side (without any harm)? crossing the river counts as one tri

Answers

Answered by Narmeen2004
1

He first takes the goat and cross
Then he keep it and returns
Then take the wolf and cross before returning he takes the goat with him
He takes the cabbage and leaves the goat behind
He keep the cabbage and returns
Then he take the goat and crosses...

And this is how he crosses without loosing any thing...

Hope it helps you...

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