Quick Reference Resources

Table of Contents

Header visual showing formula sheet, shortcuts, and speed/accuracy icons for aptitude quick revision.

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Introduction: Your Last-Minute Companion

Module 7 is your quick-access companion during final revision. Rather than re-reading lengthy explanations, you’ll find organized formula banks, memory tricks, calculation shortcuts, and red flags that indicate common mistakes. Print this module or bookmark it—you’ll return to it repeatedly in the days before your exam.

Infographic showing main formula categories for quantitative aptitude revision.
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Section 1: Formula Cheat Sheet - Organized by Topic

QUANTITATIVE APTITUDE FORMULAS

Number Systems & Simplifications

QUANTITATIVE APTITUDE FORMULAS

Percentages & Ratios

Percentages & Ratios

Profit & Loss

Profit & Loss

 Interest Calculations

 Interest Calculations

Speed, Distance, Time

Speed, Distance, Time

 Work & Time

Progressions

 Set Theory

 Set Theory

Probability

Probability
Visual showing calculation shortcuts such as percentage tricks and multiply-by-11 method.
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Section 2: Tips and Tricks Compilation

CALCULATION SHORTCUTS

Trick 1: Percentage Shortcut (5-10-20-25 Rule)

Instead of: 20% of 350 = 0.20 × 350 = 70

Think: 20% = 1/5, so 350÷5 = 70 (Much faster!)

CALCULATION SHORTCUTS

 Trick 2: Multiply by 11 Instantly

To multiply any 2-digit number by 11:

  • 23 × 11: Place digits apart (2_3), add them (2+3=5), put in middle → 253
  • 47 × 11: 4_7 → 4+7=11, carry over → 517

Trick 3: Squaring Numbers Ending in 5

To square numbers ending in 5:

  • 25² = (2×3)|25 = 6|25 = 625
  • 35² = (3×4)|25 = 12|25 = 1225
  • 45² = (4×5)|25 = 20|25 = 2025

Formula: (n5)² = [n(n+1)]|25

Trick 4: Speed-Distance-Time Conversion

Instead of remembering km/h to m/s conversion formula:

km/h to m/s: Multiply by 5/18
m/s to km/h: Multiply by 18/5

Easy way: 72 km/h = 72 × 5/18 = 20 m/s

Quick: 72 ÷ 3.6 = 20 (since 18/5 = 3.6)

Trick 5: Percentage Increase Formula Shortcut

If price increased by 25%, new price = 125% of old
Instead of: (125/100) × old price
Think: 1.25 × old price (one multiplication instead of two)

LOGICAL REASONING SHORTCUTS

Trick 1: Venn Diagram for Syllogisms

Always draw three overlapping circles for:

  • Major term
  • Minor term
  • Middle term

If you can’t draw a valid diagram, conclusion is invalid.

Trick 2: Blood Relations Quick Map

text

Parent’s sibling = Aunt/Uncle

Sibling’s child = Nephew/Niece

Aunt/Uncle’s child = Cousin

Sibling’s spouse = Brother/Sister-in-law

Rule: If you get confused, trace one person at a time.

Trick 3: Coding-Decoding Pattern Recognition

Before attempting: Check if it’s

  • Letter shift (A→B, B→C)?
  • Position-based? (1st letter +2, 2nd letter +3)?
  • Alternating? (vowels stay, consonants shift)?
  • Reverse? (word written backward)?

Identifying pattern first saves 60% of calculation time.

Trick 4: Series Pattern Hierarchy

Check patterns in this order:

  1. Arithmetic (constant difference)?
  2. Geometric (constant ratio)?
  3. Fibonacci (sum of previous two)?
  4. Square/Cube (perfect powers)?
  5. Position-based (alternate between patterns)?

Most series fit one of these five. Test them methodically instead of guessing.

Infographic showing quick-reference tools for logical reasoning like Venn diagrams and coding-decoding patterns.

Section 3: Common Pitfall Indicators

RED FLAGS THAT SIGNAL MISTAKES

Pitfall 1: “Per” vs “Total” Confusion

Red Flag: Question uses “per” but you calculated total (or vice versa)

Example: “Average salary per employee is ₹50,000. Company has 100 employees. What’s total salary?”

  • Wrong: Answer = 50,000 (forgot to multiply by 100)
  • Right: Answer = 50,000 × 100 = ₹50 lakhs

Prevention: Circle the word “per” or “total” before calculating.

Pitfall 2: Wrong Base Division

Red Flag: Profit % calculated as (Profit/Selling Price) instead of (Profit/Cost Price)

Example: CP = ₹100, SP = ₹150

  • Wrong: Profit% = 50/150 × 100 = 33.33%
  • Right: Profit% = 50/100 × 100 = 50%

Prevention: Remember: Percentage always divides by the original/starting value.

Pitfall 3: Forgetting Unit Conversion

Red Flag: Calculating with mixed units (₹ crores and ₹ lakhs in same problem)

Prevention: Convert all to same unit before any calculation.

Pitfall 4: Average Speed Error

Red Flag: Adding speeds and dividing by 2 instead of using distance/time

Example: 60 km/h for 200 km, then 40 km/h for 200 km

  • Wrong: Average = (60+40)/2 = 50 km/h
  • Right: Total distance = 400, Total time = 200/60 + 200/40 = 3.33 + 5 = 8.33 hours; Avg = 400/8.33 = 48 km/h

Prevention: Average speed = TOTAL DISTANCE ÷ TOTAL TIME (always)

Pitfall 5: “Some” Interpreted as “All”

Red Flag: Concluding “All A are C” from “All A are B” and “Some B are C”

Prevention: “Some” means at least one, not all. “Some” cannot lead to “All” conclusions.

Pitfall 6: Percentage Point vs Percentage Confusion

Red Flag: “Sales increased from 20% to 25%”

Is this:

  • 25% (5 percentage points increase)?
  • Or 125% of original (25% is 125% of 20%, so 5% increase)?

Prevention: Read carefully. If comparing percentages: 25%-20% = 5 percentage points. If calculating increase: (25-20)/20 × 100 = 25% increase.

Pitfall 7: Compound Interest vs Simple Interest

Red Flag: Using SI formula when CI is required (or vice versa)

Prevention: Check: “interest on interest” or “accumulated” → use CI. Otherwise → use SI.

Pitfall 8: Intersection vs Union Confusion

Red Flag: Calculating people who used BOTH services when question asks people who used AT LEAST ONE

Prevention: Read: “both” = intersection (∩); “either/or/at least one” = union (∪)

Pitfall 9: Time Miscalculation

Red Flag: Calculating work done after time T, but forgetting to multiply work rate by T

Example: A’s rate = 1/10 per day. After 3 days, work done = ?

  • Wrong: Answer = 1/10 (forgot to multiply by 3)
  • Right: Answer = 1/10 × 3 = 3/10

Prevention: Always: Work Done = Rate × Time

Pitfall 10: Ratio Simplification Error

Red Flag: Adding numerator and denominator separately instead of using common ratio

Example: If A:B = 2:3 and A = 100

  • Wrong: A:B = 2:3 means A=2, B=3 (but actual A=100, so B=150? No, this is wrong reasoning)
  • Right: A = 2x = 100, so x = 50, then B = 3x = 150

Prevention: Always use variable (x or k) when working with ratios; don’t use raw ratio values.

Visual showing score benchmarks, accuracy targets, and performance metrics for aptitude exams.

Section 4: Success Benchmarks and Performance Metrics

SCORE INTERPRETATION GUIDE

What Your Mock Test Score Means:

SCORE INTERPRETATION GUIDE What Your Mock Test Score Means:

 Company-Specific Score Benchmarks:

 Section-Wise Performance Goals

Quantitative Aptitude:

  • Beginner: 50-60% accuracy
  • Intermediate: 65-75% accuracy
  • Advanced: 80%+ accuracy
  • Time goal: 1.5-2 minutes per question

Logical Reasoning:

  • Beginner: 55-65% accuracy
  • Intermediate: 70-80% accuracy
  • Advanced: 85%+ accuracy
  • Time goal: 1-1.5 minutes per question

Verbal Ability:

  • Beginner: 60-70% accuracy
  • Intermediate: 75-85% accuracy
  • Advanced: 90%+ accuracy
  • Time goal: 1 minute per question

What Score Improvement Means

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Section 5: Last-Minute Revision Checklist (24 Hours Before Exam)

Morning of Exam Day (Do This, Nothing Else)

  • Review time allocation strategy (5 min)
  • Glance at formula summary (not re-learning, just refreshing) (10 min)
  • Practice 2-3 easy problems to build confidence (10 min)
  • Light breakfast, stay hydrated
  • Arrive 30 min early

Do NOT Do:

  • ❌ Learn new concepts (will confuse you)
  • ❌ Solve difficult problems (will demoralize)
  • ❌ Discuss exam with others (will create doubt)
  • ❌ Check solutions to yesterday’s practice (will stress you)

Section 6: One-Page Quick Reference (Print & Keep Handy)

FORMULA SUMMARY – ONE PAGE

text

QUICK FORMULAS FOR REVISION

PERCENTAGES: 5%=1/20, 10%=1/10, 20%=1/5, 25%=1/4

P&L: Profit% = (SP-CP)/CP × 100  [Divide by CP, not SP]

INTEREST: A = P(1+R/100)^T  [For compound interest]

AVERAGES: Total ÷ Count  [For average speed: Total Distance ÷ Total Time]

RATIOS: Use variable x; A = ax, B = bx (where a:b is ratio)

AP: Tn = a + (n-1)d  |  Sn = n/2[2a + (n-1)d]

PERMUTATION: nPr = n!/(n-r)!  |  COMBINATION: nCr = n!/(r!(n-r)!))

SETS: n(A∪B) = n(A) + n(B) – n(A∩B)

PROBABILITY: P(E) = Favorable/Total  |  P(A AND B) = P(A) × P(B)

WORK: Rate = 1/Time  |  Combined Rate = 1/T_A + 1/T_B

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