Build a number from digit conditions in order
4.NBT.A.2
Generated variants — 10
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 0.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 100{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
130,324 is a six-digit number using only 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 with all five present; its ones digit 4 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 3 (which is 4-1), thousands is 0, and the lead digit 1 gives place value 100{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 1, 3, 4, 5, 6 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 1, 3, 4, 5, 6 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 1.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 300{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 1, 3, 4, 5, 6 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
351,546 is a six-digit number using only 1, 3, 4, 5, 6 with all five present; its ones digit 6 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 5 (which is 6-1), thousands is 1, and the lead digit 3 gives place value 300{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 0, 2, 3, 4, 5 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 0, 2, 3, 4, 5 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 0.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 200{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 0, 2, 3, 4, 5 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
240,435 is a six-digit number using only 0, 2, 3, 4, 5 with all five present; its ones digit 5 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 4 (which is 5-1), thousands is 0, and the lead digit 2 gives place value 200{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 1.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 300{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
341,425 is a six-digit number using only 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 with all five present; its ones digit 5 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 4 (which is 5-1), thousands is 1, and the lead digit 3 gives place value 300{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 3.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 200{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
253,546 is a six-digit number using only 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 with all five present; its ones digit 6 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 5 (which is 6-1), thousands is 3, and the lead digit 2 gives place value 200{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 1.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 200{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
231,304 is a six-digit number using only 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 with all five present; its ones digit 4 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 3 (which is 4-1), thousands is 1, and the lead digit 2 gives place value 200{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 0, 1, 3, 4, 5 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 0, 1, 3, 4, 5 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 0.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 100{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 0, 1, 3, 4, 5 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
140,435 is a six-digit number using only 0, 1, 3, 4, 5 with all five present; its ones digit 5 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 4 (which is 5-1), thousands is 0, and the lead digit 1 gives place value 100{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 0.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 200{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
230,314 is a six-digit number using only 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 with all five present; its ones digit 4 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 3 (which is 4-1), thousands is 0, and the lead digit 2 gives place value 200{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 1.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 200{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
241,435 is a six-digit number using only 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 with all five present; its ones digit 5 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 4 (which is 5-1), thousands is 1, and the lead digit 2 gives place value 200{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.
Find the number that satisfies all of the following conditions.
- (a) It is a six-digit number.
- (b) Each of the digits is used.
- (c) The largest digit is in the lowest place (the ones place).
- (d) The digit in the ten-thousands place equals the digit in the hundreds place, and it is less than the digit in the ones place.
- (e) The digit in the thousands place is .
- (f) The value of the digit in the hundred-thousands place is .
Show solution
Understand
Build a single six-digit number whose six place-value digits satisfy a list of clues, using each of the digits 0, 2, 4, 5, 6 at least once.
- The number has six digits (hundred-thousands down to ones).
- Each of the digits 0, 2, 4, 5, 6 is used.
- The largest digit sits in the ones place.
- The ten-thousands digit equals the hundreds digit, and it is 1 less than the ones digit.
- The thousands digit is 0.
- The hundred-thousands digit has place value 200{,}000.
- The six-digit number that satisfies every condition
- Only the digits 0, 2, 4, 5, 6 may appear, and all five must show up at least once.
- A six-digit number cannot start with 0.
Plan
#6 Guess and Check · also uses: #7 Identify Subproblems#11 Work Backwards
Each clue pins down one place, so I fix the places I know for certain first (a subproblem per place), then use the 'use every digit' rule to fill the one leftover place, checking the result against all clues.
Execute
Review
250,546 is a six-digit number using only 0, 2, 4, 5, 6 with all five present; its ones digit 6 is the largest, ten-thousands and hundreds are both 5 (which is 6-1), thousands is 0, and the lead digit 2 gives place value 200{,}000. Every clue holds.
Make a systematic list (tool 2): write the place names in a row, fill each from its clue, and the single blank that remains forces the missing digit.
Standards · min grade 4
4.NBT.A.2Read and write multi-digit whole numbers and compare using symbols — Reading each place value and assembling the six-digit number from the digit clues.