Questions
2 questions per paper
Difficulty
Medium
Importance
Critical scoring booster for SSC and Bank PO exams
Overview
Data Sufficiency tests your logical ability to determine if provided information is enough to answer a specific question without actually calculating the full result. It is a critical scoring area in competitive exams because it requires conceptual clarity over tedious computation, saving valuable time during high-pressure objective tests.
The Logic Framework
The core objective is to treat each statement independently first to see if it leads to a unique solution. You must avoid personal assumptions about variables and focus strictly on whether the given parameters satisfy the constraints of the question.
- Statement I alone sufficient
- Statement II alone sufficient
- Both statements together necessary
- Either statement alone is sufficient
- Neither statement is sufficient
Arithmetic Data Sufficiency
Questions often involve Percentage, Profit & Loss, SI/CI, or Time & Work. Success depends on identifying if the 'Minimum Independent Equations' required to solve for 'N' variables are present.
- A system of N variables requires at least N independent equations
- Ratios are sufficient if they define absolute values via a base parameter
- Percentage changes cannot be converted to absolute values without a base amount
- Inequality constraints often render data insufficient
- Zero or negative values change the validity of statements
Speed-Solving Strategy
Use a systematic elimination process to minimize time wastage. Never perform complex calculations unless you are certain the data is insufficient to conclude otherwise.
- Analyze Statement I first; do not look at II
- If I works, eliminate options that require both
- Evaluate II independently; if it works alone, choose 'Either'
- Only combine if both fail individually
- Look for 'Yes/No' vs 'Value' based questions to set expectations
Formula Sheet
Number of independent linear equations must equal number of variables
Existence of a unique solution requires non-singular matrices or consistent systems
Non-linear systems (quadratics) require specific constraint checks to ensure uniqueness
Exam Tip
Stop calculating once you identify that the relationship between given variables and the question is locked; move to the next question immediately.
Common Mistakes
- Assuming values that are not explicitly stated in the problem
- Forgetting to check if the solution is unique (e.g., finding two possible values for 'x' makes data insufficient)
- Spending time on full calculation instead of verifying the sufficiency of conditions
More Revision Notes
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