Analytical Reasoning:
Tips for CAT DILR
Do you also get nightmares of sitting in your CAT exam, staring at an Analytical Reasoning (AR) problem? Rows of data, puzzling conditions, and a ticking clock threaten to overwhelm you. But guess what? With the right strategies, you can outsmart these seemingly tricky puzzles. Let me walk you through how you can tackle AR like a pro.
AR questions are like games with rules—whether it’s seating arrangements, family trees, or puzzles involving distributions. Your first task? Decode the instructions. Every condition given is a clue. Miss one, and your solution might crumble faster than Joey finishing a pizza in Friends.
Here’s an example:
Question: Six friends—A, B, C, D, E, and F—are sitting in a row facing north. A must sit to the left of C. B and F must sit at one end each. D can’t sit next to E and A. What is the arrangement?
Read carefully. Start visualising or sketching the possibilities. Yes, sketching helps—it’s your best friend here.
Speaking of sketches, AR thrives on visuals. Tables, flowcharts, or quick diagrams will save you tons of mental effort. You don’t need an artist’s touch—just ensure you clearly mark relationships and conditions. Keep it clean, though; a messy sketch can confuse you.
For example:
By elimination and a few trials, you’ll land the final arrangement. In this case, the correct order might look like B,E,A,C,D,F or F,E,A,C,D,B.
AR isn’t a race; it’s a series of steps. Break the problem down:
Here’s a quick practice problem:
Question: Three floors in a building—1st, 2nd, and 3rd—have exactly one resident each: X, Y, and Z. X cannot live on the 1st floor. Y lives below Z. Who lives on each floor?
Solution:
Trust me, these baby steps will clear the fog.
CAT loves sneaky AR questions. Watch out for these pitfalls:
For instance, if a question says, “E sits directly left of A,” don’t assume E is always at the extreme end. It’s these little details that count.