table_deduction_puzzle

Table Deduction Puzzles combine blood relation problems with tabular data. You are given a grid or table with family members and attributes (like professions, ages, or positions), and must deduce relationships using both the table data and relationship statements. These problems test integrated logical reasoning.

10Worksheets
200+Practice Questions
AdvancedDifficulty
4-5 hoursHours to Master

Introduction to table_deduction_puzzle

Table Deduction Puzzles combine blood relation problems with tabular data. You are given a grid or table with family members and attributes (like professions, ages, or positions), and must deduce relationships using both the table data and relationship statements. These problems test integrated logical reasoning.

Prerequisites

Blood relation basics Tabular data interpretation Logical deduction Grid-based reasoning Constraint satisfaction
Why This Matters: Table Deduction Puzzles appear in 2-3 questions in Banking mains and SSC exams. They test integration of blood relations with data arrangement.

How to Solve table_deduction_puzzle Problems

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Step 1: Read the table headers and understand what each row and column represents

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Step 2: List all given relationship statements separately

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Step 3: Start filling the table using direct relationship information

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Step 4: Use negative information (e.g., 'A is not X') to eliminate possibilities

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Step 5: Apply relationship deductions to fill more cells

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Step 6: Cross-reference table data with relationship statements

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Step 7: When the table is complete, answer the specific question

Pro Strategy: Create a grid with persons as rows and attributes as columns. Use ✓ for confirmed assignments, ✗ for impossibilities. Update the grid after each deduction. Use blood relations to infer age ordering and other attributes.

Example Problem

Example: Table shows 4 persons (A, B, C, D) and their ages (20, 30, 40, 50). A is older than B. C is the father of D. Who is the oldest? Solution: Step 1: Table has persons and ages Step 2: A > B (age comparison) Step 3: C is father of D → C is older than D by at least 20 years Step 4: C must be among older ages (40 or 50) Step 5: If C=50, D=20 or 30 possible Step 6: The oldest could be C or possibly someone else Step 7: Without more info, cannot determine uniquely Answer: Cannot be determined uniquely

Pro Tips & Tricks

  • Parents are always older than children (typically by 20+ years)
  • Use age gaps to match parents with children
  • Siblings have similar ages (usually within a few years)
  • Draw the grid and fill systematically
  • Use process of elimination when direct assignments aren't possible
  • Each attribute value is usually unique unless stated otherwise

Shortcut Methods to Solve Faster

If ages are given, parents must be in older age brackets
If professions are given, certain professions may imply gender (e.g., 'father' implies male)
Use the fact that each person has exactly one value per attribute
Start with the most restrictive constraints first

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Not using all given constraints
Assuming attributes are unique when they might not be
Forgetting to update the grid after each deduction
Making leaps without logical justification

Exam Importance

table_deduction_puzzle is an important topic for various competitive exams. Here's how frequently it appears:

SSC CGL
1-2 questions
BANKING PO
2-3 questions
RAILWAYS RRB
1-2 questions

Ready to Master table_deduction_puzzle?

Start with Worksheet 1 and work your way up to expert level! Each worksheet includes:

20 practice questions
Detailed solutions
Step-by-step explanations
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