Chain Rule
⚡ Unlock time-saving calculation tricks and mental math techniques. Solve complex problems in seconds with proven shortcut methods used by top performers.
Shortcut Techniques
Study MaterialShortcut Techniques – Chain Rule
Shortcut techniques in Chain Rule help candidates solve complex proportional problems quickly and accurately in SSC, Banking, Railway, CDS, NDA, UPSC, CAT, and placement examinations.
Most chain rule questions involve:
- Men and work
- Days and hours
- Machines and production
- Speed and distance
- Pipes and tanks
- Wages and labor
- Productivity calculations
Using shortcut techniques reduces lengthy calculations and improves solving speed significantly.
Why Learn Chain Rule Shortcuts?
- Improves calculation speed in exams.
- Helps solve multi-variable problems quickly.
- Reduces confusion in direct and inverse proportion.
- Useful in Time and Work questions.
- Improves analytical and logical thinking.
Shortcut #1: Identify the Missing Quantity First
Always identify the quantity that needs to be calculated.
Treat the missing quantity as the base quantity.
✔ This avoids confusion while forming ratios.
Shortcut #2: Direct Proportion Trick
If increase in one quantity increases the missing quantity:
Use Same Direction Ratio
New / Old
Examples:
- More workers → More work
- More machines → More production
- More days → More output
Shortcut #3: Inverse Proportion Trick
If increase in one quantity decreases the missing quantity:
Use Reverse Ratio
Old / New
Examples:
- More workers → Less time
- More speed → Less travel time
- More machines → Less working time
Shortcut #4: Work Formula Memory Trick
For men-days-hours problems:
Work ∝ Men × Days × Hours
Use this formula directly instead of lengthy proportional calculations.
Shortcut #5: Machine Production Shortcut
For machine-production questions:
Production ∝ Machines × Time
Example:
5 machines produce 1000 units in 8 days.
10 machines in 8 days:
= 2000 units
Shortcut #6: Speed-Time Shortcut
For speed and time problems:
Speed × Time = Constant
If speed increases:
Time decreases proportionally.
Shortcut #7: Table Method
Create a comparison table for complex questions.
| Quantity | Old Value | New Value | Relation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Workers | 12 | 18 | Inverse |
| Days | 15 | 10 | Inverse |
| Hours | 8 | ? | Required |
✔ Table method avoids mistakes in proportional comparisons.
Shortcut #8: Unit Cancellation Trick
Cancel common numbers before multiplication.
(12/18) × (15/10)
= (2/3) × (3/2)
= 1
This saves calculation time significantly.
Shortcut #9: More-Less Rule
Quickly identify proportional relationships using:
More → More = Direct
More → Less = Inverse
Examples:
- More workers → More work = Direct
- More workers → Less time = Inverse
- More speed → Less time = Inverse
Shortcut #10: Constant Work Method
In work-related problems:
Men × Days × Hours = Constant
Use this directly for quick calculations.
Example:
12 × 15 × 8 = 18 × 10 × x
x = 8
Shortcut #11: Cross Multiplication Method
For two-variable proportional problems:
Use cross multiplication directly.
Example:
5 machines → 1000 units
10 machines → x units
x = 2000
Shortcut #12: Fraction Method
Convert proportional relations into fractions for faster calculations.
Required Value = Base × Product of Ratios
This method is very useful in multi-variable problems.
Shortcut #13: Direct Multiplication Trick
For completely direct proportional problems:
Multiply all increasing factors together.
Example:
Production:
= Base × (New Machines / Old Machines) × (New Days / Old Days)
Shortcut #14: Inverse Multiplication Trick
For inverse proportional problems:
Reverse the changing factor.
Example:
More workers:
= Old Workers / New Workers
Shortcut #15: Approximation Technique
In MCQs, approximate large values whenever possible.
998 ≈ 1000
49 ≈ 50
Use only when answer options are widely separated.
Shortcut #16: Ratio Simplification Technique
Simplify ratios before multiplication.
18/12 = 3/2
15/10 = 3/2
This makes calculations easier and faster.
Shortcut #17: Memory Table for Relationships
| Condition | Relationship |
|---|---|
| More Workers → Less Time | Inverse |
| More Machines → More Production | Direct |
| More Speed → Less Time | Inverse |
| More Days → More Work | Direct |
| More Hours → More Work | Direct |
Shortcut #18: Universal Work Shortcut
For most work-related chain rule problems:
(Men × Days × Hours) / Work = Constant
Use this formula directly whenever applicable.
Important Exam Tips
- Always identify direct and inverse relationships first.
- Use table method for complex problems.
- Cancel common factors before multiplication.
- Memorize common relationship patterns.
- Practice men-days-hours questions regularly.
- Use approximation only when safe.
- Verify proportional relations carefully.
Shortcut techniques in Chain Rule help candidates improve speed, reduce lengthy calculations, and solve proportional aptitude questions efficiently in competitive examinations.