SOLUTION: I run a book club with $n$ people, not including myself. Every day, for $400$ days, I invite $2$ members in the club to review a book. What is the smallest positive integer $n$ s

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Question 1207618: I run a book club with $n$ people, not including myself. Every day, for $400$ days, I invite $2$ members in the club to review a book. What is the smallest positive integer $n$ so that I can avoid ever having the exact same group of $2$ members over all $400$ days?
Answer by ikleyn(52797) About Me  (Show Source):
You can put this solution on YOUR website!
.
I run a book club with n people, not including myself. Every day, for 400 days,
I invite 2 members in the club to review a book. What is the smallest positive integer n
so that I can avoid ever having the exact same group of 2 members over all 400 days?
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                It looks to be complicated.
                But in reality,  it is as simple as a cucumber,  and,  in addition,  it is charming.
                When you learn it out,  you will gasp . . .


Let the number of the members be n.

Then the number of pairs is  %28n%28n-1%29%29%2F2.


They want you find the minimum possible n such that  

    %28n%2A%28n-1%29%29%2F2 >= 400.    (1)


So, all you need is to solve this inequality.


Multiply both sides by 2

    n*(n-1) >= 2*400 = 800.    (2)


Square root of 800 is  28.2842...


So, your number n is the first integer positive number 
which satisfies (2), and it is somewhere close to 28.


Check n= 28: 28*(28-1) = 28*27 = 756  <<<---=== not enough

Check n= 29: 29*(29-1) = 29*28 = 812  <<<---=== just enough


ANSWER.  You should have at least 29 members in the club to make it possible.

Solved.


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        The blind begin to walk and the dumb begin to see
        when they receive such beautiful solutions to their problems.