Number Series

Crack the logic behind the numbers. Master Difference patterns, Multiplication logic, and Square/Cube traps to solve series questions in seconds.

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1. The Growth Rate Hack (First Look)

Before solving, look at the first and last number to decide the method.

  • Slow Growth: (e.g., 5 to 50) \to Check Difference (+/-).
  • Fast Growth: (e.g., 5 to 5000) \to Check Multiplication (×\times).
  • Super Fast Growth: \to Check Squares/Cubes.
  • Up-Down Pattern: \to Check Alternating Series or imes0.5 imes 0.5 logic.

Example:

Q: Identify Logic: 12, 14, 18, 24, ? vs 2, 4, 12, 48, ?
Solution: Series 1: 12 to 24 (Slow) \to Diff: +2, +4, +6.
Series 2: 2 to 48 (Fast) \to Mult: ×2,×3,×4\times 2, \times 3, \times 4.

2. The 'Half-Pattern' Trap

If a series decreases then increases (e.g., 10, 5, 5, 7.5...), it is ALWAYS a Decimal Multiplication series (0.50.5).

  • Pattern: ×0.5,×1,×1.5,×2...\times 0.5, \times 1, \times 1.5, \times 2...

Example:

Q: Solve: 16, 8, 8, 12, 24, ?
Solution: 16×0.5=816 \times 0.5 = 8
8×1=88 \times 1 = 8
8×1.5=128 \times 1.5 = 12
12×2=2412 \times 2 = 24
Next: 24×2.5=6024 \times 2.5 = 60.

3. Double Difference (The Safety Net)

If single difference fails, check the Difference of Difference. 90% of 'Unknown' logic questions are solved by Double Difference.

  • Step 1: Find Diff 1.
  • Step 2: Find Diff 2. Check for constant or AP pattern there.

Example:

Q: 10, 15, 24, 38, ?
Solution: Diff 1: 5, 9, 14 (No pattern).
Diff 2: (9-5)=4, (14-9)=5... Next Diff 2 might be 6.
So Next Diff 1 = 14+6=20.
Ans: 38+20=5838+20 = 58.

4. Square & Cube Patterns (+/- Rule)

Memorize Squares (1-30) and Cubes (1-15). Patterns often involve n2n^2 or n3n^3 with an offset.

  • n2+1n^2 + 1: 2, 5, 10, 17...
  • n3nn^3 - n: 0, 6, 24, 60...
  • n2nn^2 - n: 0, 2, 6, 12...

Example:

Q: Find next: 0, 6, 24, 60, ?
Solution: 131=01^3-1=0
232=62^3-2=6
333=243^3-3=24
434=604^3-4=60
Next: 535=1255=1205^3-5 = 125-5 = 120.

5. Prime Number Logic

Often confused with Odd numbers. If you see 2, 3, 5, 7... the next is NOT 9, it is 11.

  • Prime Digits: The numbers themselves might be prime.
  • Prime Addition: Gaps are prime numbers.

Example:

Q: Series: 4, 6, 9, 14, 21, ?
Solution: Gaps: +2, +3, +5, +7 (Prime numbers).
Next Gap: +11.
Ans: 21+11=3221+11 = 32.

6. Alternating Series (Twin Series)

Two independent series hidden in one. Look for this when the length is long (7+ terms) or pattern goes Up-Down irregularly.

  • Odd Positions: 1st, 3rd, 5th terms form a series.
  • Even Positions: 2nd, 4th, 6th terms form another.

Example:

Q: Solve: 2, 20, 4, 30, 6, 40, ?
Solution: Series A (Odd): 2, 4, 6... Next is 8.
Series B (Even): 20, 30, 40...
Question asks for 7th term (Odd position). Ans: 8.

7. Wrong Number Strategy (The Consistency Test)

The hardest type. Don't find the next number; check which one BREAKS the rule.

  • Rule: A wrong number usually affects two differences (the one before it and the one after it).
  • Tip: Start from the end or the simplest part to establish the pattern first.

Example:

Q: Wrong Number: 5, 10, 15, 20, 24, 30
Solution: Pattern appears to be +5+5.
5+5=105+5=10, 10+5=1510+5=15, 15+5=2015+5=20.
20+5=2520+5=25, but 24 is given.
So 24 is wrong.
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