Summer is a great time to explore cool problems to keep your skills sharp!  Schedule a class today!

Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
3 M G
BBookmark  VNew Topic kLocked
Contests & Programs AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
AMC and other contests, summer programs, etc.
3 M G
BBookmark  VNew Topic kLocked
G
Topic
First Poster
Last Poster
k a May Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
May 1, 2025
May is an exciting month! National MATHCOUNTS is the second week of May in Washington D.C. and our Founder, Richard Rusczyk will be presenting a seminar, Preparing Strong Math Students for College and Careers, on May 11th.

Are you interested in working towards MATHCOUNTS and don’t know where to start? We have you covered! If you have taken Prealgebra, then you are ready for MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics. Already aiming for State or National MATHCOUNTS and harder AMC 8 problems? Then our MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced course is for you.

Summer camps are starting next month at the Virtual Campus in math and language arts that are 2 - to 4 - weeks in duration. Spaces are still available - don’t miss your chance to have an enriching summer experience. There are middle and high school competition math camps as well as Math Beasts camps that review key topics coupled with fun explorations covering areas such as graph theory (Math Beasts Camp 6), cryptography (Math Beasts Camp 7-8), and topology (Math Beasts Camp 8-9)!

Be sure to mark your calendars for the following upcoming events:
[list][*]May 9th, 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, Casework 2: Overwhelming Evidence — A Text Adventure, a game where participants will work together to navigate the map, solve puzzles, and win! All are welcome.
[*]May 19th, 4:30pm PT/7:30pm ET, What's Next After Beast Academy?, designed for students finishing Beast Academy and ready for Prealgebra 1.
[*]May 20th, 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Mathcamp 2025 Qualifying Quiz Part 1 Math Jam, Problems 1 to 4, join the Canada/USA Mathcamp staff for this exciting Math Jam, where they discuss solutions to Problems 1 to 4 of the 2025 Mathcamp Qualifying Quiz!
[*]May 21st, 4:00pm PT/7:00pm ET, Mathcamp 2025 Qualifying Quiz Part 2 Math Jam, Problems 5 and 6, Canada/USA Mathcamp staff will discuss solutions to Problems 5 and 6 of the 2025 Mathcamp Qualifying Quiz![/list]
Our full course list for upcoming classes is below:
All classes run 7:30pm-8:45pm ET/4:30pm - 5:45pm PT unless otherwise noted.

Introductory: Grades 5-10

Prealgebra 1 Self-Paced

Prealgebra 1
Tuesday, May 13 - Aug 26
Thursday, May 29 - Sep 11
Sunday, Jun 15 - Oct 12
Monday, Jun 30 - Oct 20
Wednesday, Jul 16 - Oct 29

Prealgebra 2 Self-Paced

Prealgebra 2
Wednesday, May 7 - Aug 20
Monday, Jun 2 - Sep 22
Sunday, Jun 29 - Oct 26
Friday, Jul 25 - Nov 21

Introduction to Algebra A Self-Paced

Introduction to Algebra A
Sunday, May 11 - Sep 14 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Wednesday, May 14 - Aug 27
Friday, May 30 - Sep 26
Monday, Jun 2 - Sep 22
Sunday, Jun 15 - Oct 12
Thursday, Jun 26 - Oct 9
Tuesday, Jul 15 - Oct 28

Introduction to Counting & Probability Self-Paced

Introduction to Counting & Probability
Thursday, May 15 - Jul 31
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Wednesday, Jul 9 - Sep 24
Sunday, Jul 27 - Oct 19

Introduction to Number Theory
Friday, May 9 - Aug 1
Wednesday, May 21 - Aug 6
Monday, Jun 9 - Aug 25
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14
Tuesday, Jul 15 - Sep 30

Introduction to Algebra B Self-Paced

Introduction to Algebra B
Tuesday, May 6 - Aug 19
Wednesday, Jun 4 - Sep 17
Sunday, Jun 22 - Oct 19
Friday, Jul 18 - Nov 14

Introduction to Geometry
Sunday, May 11 - Nov 9
Tuesday, May 20 - Oct 28
Monday, Jun 16 - Dec 8
Friday, Jun 20 - Jan 9
Sunday, Jun 29 - Jan 11
Monday, Jul 14 - Jan 19

Paradoxes and Infinity
Mon, Tue, Wed, & Thurs, Jul 14 - Jul 16 (meets every day of the week!)

Intermediate: Grades 8-12

Intermediate Algebra
Sunday, Jun 1 - Nov 23
Tuesday, Jun 10 - Nov 18
Wednesday, Jun 25 - Dec 10
Sunday, Jul 13 - Jan 18
Thursday, Jul 24 - Jan 22

Intermediate Counting & Probability
Wednesday, May 21 - Sep 17
Sunday, Jun 22 - Nov 2

Intermediate Number Theory
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Wednesday, Jun 18 - Sep 3

Precalculus
Friday, May 16 - Oct 24
Sunday, Jun 1 - Nov 9
Monday, Jun 30 - Dec 8

Advanced: Grades 9-12

Olympiad Geometry
Tuesday, Jun 10 - Aug 26

Calculus
Tuesday, May 27 - Nov 11
Wednesday, Jun 25 - Dec 17

Group Theory
Thursday, Jun 12 - Sep 11

Contest Preparation: Grades 6-12

MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics
Friday, May 23 - Aug 15
Monday, Jun 2 - Aug 18
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)

MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced
Sunday, May 11 - Aug 10
Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
Wednesday, Jun 11 - Aug 27
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)

AMC 10 Problem Series
Friday, May 9 - Aug 1
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Tuesday, Jun 17 - Sep 2
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Monday, Jun 23 - Sep 15
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)

AMC 10 Final Fives
Sunday, May 11 - Jun 8
Tuesday, May 27 - Jun 17
Monday, Jun 30 - Jul 21

AMC 12 Problem Series
Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Wednesday, Aug 6 - Oct 22

AMC 12 Final Fives
Sunday, May 18 - Jun 15

AIME Problem Series A
Thursday, May 22 - Jul 31

AIME Problem Series B
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21

F=ma Problem Series
Wednesday, Jun 11 - Aug 27

WOOT Programs
Visit the pages linked for full schedule details for each of these programs!


MathWOOT Level 1
MathWOOT Level 2
ChemWOOT
CodeWOOT
PhysicsWOOT

Programming

Introduction to Programming with Python
Thursday, May 22 - Aug 7
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Tuesday, Jun 17 - Sep 2
Monday, Jun 30 - Sep 22

Intermediate Programming with Python
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Monday, Jun 30 - Sep 22

USACO Bronze Problem Series
Tuesday, May 13 - Jul 29
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 1

Physics

Introduction to Physics
Wednesday, May 21 - Aug 6
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14
Monday, Jun 23 - Sep 15

Physics 1: Mechanics
Thursday, May 22 - Oct 30
Monday, Jun 23 - Dec 15

Relativity
Mon, Tue, Wed & Thurs, Jun 23 - Jun 26 (meets every day of the week!)
0 replies
jlacosta
May 1, 2025
0 replies
k i A Letter to MSM
Arr0w   23
N Sep 19, 2022 by scannose
Greetings.

I have seen many posts talking about commonly asked questions, such as finding the value of $0^0$, $\frac{1}{0}$,$\frac{0}{0}$, $\frac{\infty}{\infty}$, why $0.999...=1$ or even expressions of those terms combined as if that would make them defined. I have made this post to answer these questions once and for all, and I politely ask everyone to link this post to threads that are talking about this issue.
[list]
[*]Firstly, the case of $0^0$. It is usually regarded that $0^0=1$, not because this works numerically but because it is convenient to define it this way. You will see the convenience of defining other undefined things later on in this post.

[*]What about $\frac{\infty}{\infty}$? The issue here is that $\infty$ isn't even rigorously defined in this expression. What exactly do we mean by $\infty$? Unless the example in question is put in context in a formal manner, then we say that $\frac{\infty}{\infty}$ is meaningless.

[*]What about $\frac{1}{0}$? Suppose that $x=\frac{1}{0}$. Then we would have $x\cdot 0=0=1$, absurd. A more rigorous treatment of the idea is that $\lim_{x\to0}\frac{1}{x}$ does not exist in the first place, although you will see why in a calculus course. So the point is that $\frac{1}{0}$ is undefined.

[*]What about if $0.99999...=1$? An article from brilliant has a good explanation. Alternatively, you can just use a geometric series. Notice that
\begin{align*}
\sum_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{9}{10^n}&=9\sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\frac{1}{10^n}=9\sum_{n=1}^{\infty}\biggr(\frac{1}{10}\biggr)^n=9\biggr(\frac{\frac{1}{10}}{1-\frac{1}{10}}\biggr)=9\biggr(\frac{\frac{1}{10}}{\frac{9}{10}}\biggr)=9\biggr(\frac{1}{9}\biggr)=\boxed{1}
\end{align*}
[*]What about $\frac{0}{0}$? Usually this is considered to be an indeterminate form, but I would also wager that this is also undefined.
[/list]
Hopefully all of these issues and their corollaries are finally put to rest. Cheers.

2nd EDIT (6/14/22): Since I originally posted this, it has since blown up so I will try to add additional information per the request of users in the thread below.

INDETERMINATE VS UNDEFINED

What makes something indeterminate? As you can see above, there are many things that are indeterminate. While definitions might vary slightly, it is the consensus that the following definition holds: A mathematical expression is be said to be indeterminate if it is not definitively or precisely determined. So how does this make, say, something like $0/0$ indeterminate? In analysis (the theory behind calculus and beyond), limits involving an algebraic combination of functions in an independent variable may often be evaluated by replacing these functions by their limits. However, if the expression obtained after this substitution does not provide sufficient information to determine the original limit, then the expression is called an indeterminate form. For example, we could say that $0/0$ is an indeterminate form.

But we need to more specific, this is still ambiguous. An indeterminate form is a mathematical expression involving at most two of $0$, $1$ or $\infty$, obtained by applying the algebraic limit theorem (a theorem in analysis, look this up for details) in the process of attempting to determine a limit, which fails to restrict that limit to one specific value or infinity, and thus does not determine the limit being calculated. This is why it is called indeterminate. Some examples of indeterminate forms are
\[0/0, \infty/\infty, \infty-\infty, \infty \times 0\]etc etc. So what makes something undefined? In the broader scope, something being undefined refers to an expression which is not assigned an interpretation or a value. A function is said to be undefined for points outside its domain. For example, the function $f:\mathbb{R}^{+}\cup\{0\}\rightarrow\mathbb{R}$ given by the mapping $x\mapsto \sqrt{x}$ is undefined for $x<0$. On the other hand, $1/0$ is undefined because dividing by $0$ is not defined in arithmetic by definition. In other words, something is undefined when it is not defined in some mathematical context.

WHEN THE WATERS GET MUDDIED

So with this notion of indeterminate and undefined, things get convoluted. First of all, just because something is indeterminate does not mean it is not undefined. For example $0/0$ is considered both indeterminate and undefined (but in the context of a limit then it is considered in indeterminate form). Additionally, this notion of something being undefined also means that we can define it in some way. To rephrase, this means that technically, we can make something that is undefined to something that is defined as long as we define it. I'll show you what I mean.

One example of making something undefined into something defined is the extended real number line, which we define as
\[\overline{\mathbb{R}}=\mathbb{R}\cup \{-\infty,+\infty\}.\]So instead of treating infinity as an idea, we define infinity (positively and negatively, mind you) as actual numbers in the reals. The advantage of doing this is for two reasons. The first is because we can turn this thing into a totally ordered set. Specifically, we can let $-\infty\le a\le \infty$ for each $a\in\overline{\mathbb{R}}$ which means that via this order topology each subset has an infimum and supremum and $\overline{\mathbb{R}}$ is therefore compact. While this is nice from an analytic standpoint, extending the reals in this way can allow for interesting arithmetic! In $\overline{\mathbb{R}}$ it is perfectly OK to say that,
\begin{align*}
a + \infty = \infty + a & = \infty, & a & \neq -\infty \\
a - \infty = -\infty + a & = -\infty, & a & \neq \infty \\
a \cdot (\pm\infty) = \pm\infty \cdot a & = \pm\infty, & a & \in (0, +\infty] \\
a \cdot (\pm\infty) = \pm\infty \cdot a & = \mp\infty, & a & \in [-\infty, 0) \\
\frac{a}{\pm\infty} & = 0, & a & \in \mathbb{R} \\
\frac{\pm\infty}{a} & = \pm\infty, & a & \in (0, +\infty) \\
\frac{\pm\infty}{a} & = \mp\infty, & a & \in (-\infty, 0).
\end{align*}So addition, multiplication, and division are all defined nicely. However, notice that we have some indeterminate forms here which are also undefined,
\[\infty-\infty,\frac{\pm\infty}{\pm\infty},\frac{\pm\infty}{0},0\cdot \pm\infty.\]So while we define certain things, we also left others undefined/indeterminate in the process! However, in the context of measure theory it is common to define $\infty \times 0=0$ as greenturtle3141 noted below. I encourage to reread what he wrote, it's great stuff! As you may notice, though, dividing by $0$ is undefined still! Is there a place where it isn't? Kind of. To do this, we can extend the complex numbers! More formally, we can define this extension as
\[\mathbb{C}^*=\mathbb{C}\cup\{\tilde{\infty}\}\]which we call the Riemann Sphere (it actually forms a sphere, pretty cool right?). As a note, $\tilde{\infty}$ means complex infinity, since we are in the complex plane now. Here's the catch: division by $0$ is allowed here! In fact, we have
\[\frac{z}{0}=\tilde{\infty},\frac{z}{\tilde{\infty}}=0.\]where $\tilde{\infty}/\tilde{\infty}$ and $0/0$ are left undefined. We also have
\begin{align*}
z+\tilde{\infty}=\tilde{\infty}, \forall z\ne -\infty\\
z\times \tilde{\infty}=\tilde{\infty}, \forall z\ne 0
\end{align*}Furthermore, we actually have some nice properties with multiplication that we didn't have before. In $\mathbb{C}^*$ it holds that
\[\tilde{\infty}\times \tilde{\infty}=\tilde{\infty}\]but $\tilde{\infty}-\tilde{\infty}$ and $0\times \tilde{\infty}$ are left as undefined (unless there is an explicit need to change that somehow). One could define the projectively extended reals as we did with $\mathbb{C}^*$, by defining them as
\[{\widehat {\mathbb {R} }}=\mathbb {R} \cup \{\infty \}.\]They behave in a similar way to the Riemann Sphere, with division by $0$ also being allowed with the same indeterminate forms (in addition to some other ones).
23 replies
Arr0w
Feb 11, 2022
scannose
Sep 19, 2022
k i Marathon Threads
LauraZed   0
Jul 2, 2019
Due to excessive spam and inappropriate posts, we have locked the Prealgebra and Beginning Algebra threads.

We will either unlock these threads once we've cleaned them up or start new ones, but for now, do not start new marathon threads for these subjects. Any new marathon threads started while this announcement is up will be immediately deleted.
0 replies
LauraZed
Jul 2, 2019
0 replies
k i Basic Forum Rules and Info (Read before posting)
jellymoop   368
N May 16, 2018 by harry1234
f (Reminder: Do not post Alcumus or class homework questions on this forum. Instructions below.) f
Welcome to the Middle School Math Forum! Please take a moment to familiarize yourself with the rules.

Overview:
[list]
[*] When you're posting a new topic with a math problem, give the topic a detailed title that includes the subject of the problem (not just "easy problem" or "nice problem")
[*] Stay on topic and be courteous.
[*] Hide solutions!
[*] If you see an inappropriate post in this forum, simply report the post and a moderator will deal with it. Don't make your own post telling people they're not following the rules - that usually just makes the issue worse.
[*] When you post a question that you need help solving, post what you've attempted so far and not just the question. We are here to learn from each other, not to do your homework. :P
[*] Avoid making posts just to thank someone - you can use the upvote function instead
[*] Don't make a new reply just to repeat yourself or comment on the quality of others' posts; instead, post when you have a new insight or question. You can also edit your post if it's the most recent and you want to add more information.
[*] Avoid bumping old posts.
[*] Use GameBot to post alcumus questions.
[*] If you need general MATHCOUNTS/math competition advice, check out the threads below.
[*] Don't post other users' real names.
[*] Advertisements are not allowed. You can advertise your forum on your profile with a link, on your blog, and on user-created forums that permit forum advertisements.
[/list]

Here are links to more detailed versions of the rules. These are from the older forums, so you can overlook "Classroom math/Competition math only" instructions.
Posting Guidelines
Update on Basic Forum Rules
What belongs on this forum?
How do I write a thorough solution?
How do I get a problem on the contest page?
How do I study for mathcounts?
Mathcounts FAQ and resources
Mathcounts and how to learn

As always, if you have any questions, you can PM me or any of the other Middle School Moderators. Once again, if you see spam, it would help a lot if you filed a report instead of responding :)

Marathons!
Relays might be a better way to describe it, but these threads definitely go the distance! One person starts off by posting a problem, and the next person comes up with a solution and a new problem for another user to solve. Here's some of the frequently active marathons running in this forum:
[list][*]Algebra
[*]Prealgebra
[*]Proofs
[*]Factoring
[*]Geometry
[*]Counting & Probability
[*]Number Theory[/list]
Some of these haven't received attention in a while, but these are the main ones for their respective subjects. Rather than starting a new marathon, please give the existing ones a shot first.

You can also view marathons via the Marathon tag.

Think this list is incomplete or needs changes? Let the mods know and we'll take a look.
368 replies
jellymoop
May 8, 2015
harry1234
May 16, 2018
Recommend number theory books
MoonlightNT   0
32 minutes ago
I’m preparing AIME and USA(J)MO.
Can you recommend specifically Number theory books?
I already had intro NT of AOSP.
Thank you
0 replies
MoonlightNT
32 minutes ago
0 replies
Overly wordy problems
ZMB038   16
N Today at 6:47 AM by Yiyj
Hey everyone, here we can post questions with way to many extraneous words, that are actually easy.
Try to solve the one above yours.
I'll start:
Click to reveal hidden text
16 replies
ZMB038
May 28, 2025
Yiyj
Today at 6:47 AM
No one here has solved the revised version yet
PikaVee   7
N Today at 6:19 AM by PikaVee
(Thanks Random Stranger for the idea and I will be making it so it is extremely specific to your solution.)
We are playing Pokemon Scarlet and Violet and you are fighting a friend. You and your friend don't have any items at all and the pokemon does not have any held items. Your friend challenges you to a battle because he just said nah I'd win.

You two start the battle using only one Pokemon each which neither of you knows the type of the other. Luckily he had used a level 28 Squirtle and you had used a level 25 Pikachu. Surprisingly both of the Pokemon each have one HP. Your Pikachu has a move set of one single move of Thunder with 10/10 PP and has 1 HP because you forgot to go to the Pokemon center. Your Pikachu also has a bad IV stat in speed with 1/15 and the 252 EV speed stat of the Squirtle combined with a perfect IV stat in speed makes it so it guarantees to always out speed your move. To account for that he made his Squirtle have 1 HP on purpose for absolutely no reason.

After he saw what kind of moves you have and since that person was so cocky and confident that they decided to gamble all their moves with each having an equal chance of being used. Their Squirtle has a move set of Protect 10 PP which has 100% chance of being used and has has the success probability multiplied by 1/3 every time it is being used (Meaning the second time it is being used has a 33% chance of succeeding and a third time it will be 11%. This also ignores the rules of how the move is regularly used by making the 4th move 1/27 instead of it being a guaranteed fail and so on.), Tackle which has a 100% chance to hit having 10/35 PP , Water Gun which has a 100% chance of hitting with 10/25 and Rain Dance with 5/5 PP and 100% chance of being used. If the amount of PP reaches 0 it will be unavailable for the rest of the fight meaning that the probability for each other move to be used goes from 25% all the way to 33%.

For everyone who wants to solve the easy part. If the probability that Squirtle will survive turn 1 when simplified is a/b then what is a+b?

Alright so for Squirtle to survive turn one then we try to find out how Squirte will faint at turn one. First of all Pikachu needs to hit Thunder bolt at a 70% chance then get a 25% chance that the Squirtle will use Rain Dance so that the Squirtle will not faint the Pikachu because it didn't attack. Another possible option is for it to choose Water Gun and miss so it would be a 70% * 25% * 5% chance for Pikachu to faint Squirtle. 70% = \frac{7}{10}, 25% = \frac{1}{4}, and 5% = \frac{1}{20} So the complement of what we are trying to find is $\frac{7}{10}*\frac{1}{4}+\frac{7}{10}*\frac{1}{4}*\frac{1}{20}=\frac{7}{10*4}+\frac{7}{10*4*20}=\frac{7}{40}+\frac{7}{800}=\frac{140}{800}+\frac{7}{800}=\frac{147}{800}$. The complement of this would be $1-\frac{147}{800}$ or $\frac{653}{800}$. The final thing we can do is to make sure it is simplified and add the numerator and the denominator which is $653$ and $800$ so $653+800=1453$ This should be final answer. (Mathdash rating 800)

For the very hard question, What is the probability that the Squirtle will win this fight? (This is going to be a very long arithmetic series with a lot of cases. The max amount of turns this fight can have is 11 turns.)
7 replies
PikaVee
May 28, 2025
PikaVee
Today at 6:19 AM
Problem of the day
sultanine   20
N Today at 3:16 AM by EthanNg6
[center]Every day I will post 3 new problems
one easy, one medium, and one hard.
Please hide your answers so others won't be affected
:D :) :D :) :D
20 replies
sultanine
May 23, 2025
EthanNg6
Today at 3:16 AM
A Variety of Math Problems to solve
FJH07   48
N Today at 3:13 AM by EthanNg6
Hi, so people can post different math problems that they think are hard, and I will post some (I think middle school math level) problems so that the community can help solve them. :)
48 replies
FJH07
May 22, 2025
EthanNg6
Today at 3:13 AM
Worst Sillies of All Time
pingpongmerrily   61
N Today at 3:01 AM by shaayonsamanta
Share the worst sillies you have ever made!

Mine was probably on the 2024 MathCounts State Target Round Problem 8, where I wrote my answer as a fraction instead of a percent, which cost me a trip to Nationals that year.
61 replies
pingpongmerrily
May 30, 2025
shaayonsamanta
Today at 3:01 AM
AMC 8 info
VivaanKam   5
N Today at 3:00 AM by shaayonsamanta
Hi I will be attending the AMC 8 contest in 2026. How does it work? time? number of questions? points? scoring?
5 replies
VivaanKam
Today at 1:11 AM
shaayonsamanta
Today at 3:00 AM
AIME qual outside US?
daijobu   11
N Today at 2:59 AM by CatCatHead
Can students outside the US take the AIME if they earn a qualifying score?
11 replies
daijobu
Friday at 7:10 PM
CatCatHead
Today at 2:59 AM
Mustang Math Recruitment is Open!
MustangMathTournament   8
N Today at 2:54 AM by Henry2020
The Interest Form for joining Mustang Math is open!

Hello all!

We're Mustang Math, and we are currently recruiting for the 2025-2026 year! If you are a high school or college student and are passionate about promoting an interest in competition math to younger students, you should strongly consider filling out the following form: https://link.mustangmath.com/join. Every member in MM truly has the potential to make a huge impact, no matter your experience!

About Mustang Math

Mustang Math is a nonprofit organization of high school and college volunteers that is dedicated to providing middle schoolers access to challenging, interesting, fun, and collaborative math competitions and resources. Having reached over 4000 U.S. competitors and 1150 international competitors in our first six years, we are excited to expand our team to offer our events to even more mathematically inclined students.

PROJECTS
We have worked on various math-related projects. Our annual team math competition, Mustang Math Tournament (MMT) recently ran. We hosted 8 in-person competitions based in Washington, NorCal, SoCal, Illinois, Georgia, Massachusetts, Nevada and New Jersey, as well as an online competition run nationally. In total, we had almost 900 competitors, and the students had glowing reviews of the event. MMT International will once again be running later in August, and with it, we anticipate our contest to reach over a thousand students.

In our classes, we teach students math in fun and engaging math lessons and help them discover the beauty of mathematics. Our aspiring tech team is working on a variety of unique projects like our website and custom test platform. We also have a newsletter, which, combined with our social media presence, helps to keep the mathematics community engaged with cool puzzles, tidbits, and information about the math world! Our design team ensures all our merch and material is aesthetically pleasing.

Some highlights of this past year include 1000+ students in our classes, AMC10 mock with 150+ participants, our monthly newsletter to a subscriber base of 6000+, creating 8 designs for 800 pieces of physical merchandise, as well as improving our custom website (mustangmath.com, 20k visits) and test-taking platform (comp.mt, 6500+ users).

Why Join Mustang Math?

As a non-profit organization on the rise, there are numerous opportunities for volunteers to share ideas and suggest projects that they are interested in. Through our organizational structure, members who are committed have the opportunity to become a part of the leadership team. Overall, working in the Mustang Math team is both a fun and fulfilling experience where volunteers are able to pursue their passion all while learning how to take initiative and work with peers. We welcome everyone interested in joining!

More Information

To learn more, visit https://link.mustangmath.com/RecruitmentInfo. If you have any questions or concerns, please email us at contact@mustangmath.com.

https://link.mustangmath.com/join
8 replies
MustangMathTournament
May 24, 2025
Henry2020
Today at 2:54 AM
MOP Emails Out! (not clickbait)
Mathandski   106
N Today at 2:32 AM by CheerfulZebra68
What an emotional roller coaster the past 34 days have been.

Congrats to all that qualified!
106 replies
Mathandski
Apr 22, 2025
CheerfulZebra68
Today at 2:32 AM
MathDash help
Spacepandamath13   11
N Today at 1:27 AM by Yiyj
AkshajK ORZ by the way invited me to do MathDash a few months ago and I did try it one day but haven't done it much after (Sorry). Now, I'm getting back into it and finding the format kind of weird. When selecting certain problem type sometimes it lets me pick immediately, other times not. Any fixes?
11 replies
Spacepandamath13
May 29, 2025
Yiyj
Today at 1:27 AM
Challenge: Make every number to 100 using 4 fours
CJB19   274
N Today at 12:30 AM by AllenHou
I've seen this attempted a lot but I want to see if the AoPS community can actually do it. Using ONLY 4 fours and math operations, make as many numbers as you can. Try to go in order. I'll start:
$$(4-4)*4*4=0$$$$4-4+4/4=1$$$$4/4+4/4=2$$$$(4+4+4)/4=3$$$$4+(4-4)*4=4$$$$4+4^{4-4}=5$$$$4!/4+4-4=6$$$$4+4-4/4=7$$$$4+4+4-4=8$$
274 replies
CJB19
May 15, 2025
AllenHou
Today at 12:30 AM
DHR Amc8?
imsuper   139
N Today at 12:23 AM by Moon_settler
What do yall think the DHR this year will be? Will 22 be enough?
139 replies
imsuper
Jan 30, 2025
Moon_settler
Today at 12:23 AM
Combo Bash
DhruvJha   5
N Yesterday at 11:01 PM by EthanNg6
Devin and Cowen are playing a game where they take turns flipping a biased coin. The coin lands on heads with probability 2/3 and tails with probability 1/3. Devin goes first. On each turn, the current player flips the coin repeatedly until the coin lands tails. For each heads flipped, the player gains 1 point and continues flipping. If the coin lands tails, their turn ends, and the other player takes their turn. The first player to reach 3 points wins the game immediately. What is the probability that Devin wins the game? Express your answer as a common fraction in lowest terms.
5 replies
DhruvJha
May 27, 2025
EthanNg6
Yesterday at 11:01 PM
9 Mock aime 2 problems
beta   32
N Jan 28, 2024 by P_Groudon
So here are the problems, answers are due by Sunday, December 11th, 2005, 8:00 PM EST. Have fun!

PM or IM me your answers.
32 replies
beta
Nov 30, 2005
P_Groudon
Jan 28, 2024
Mock aime 2 problems
G H J
G H BBookmark kLocked kLocked NReply
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#1 • 4 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, parmenides51, WiseTigerJ1
9Poll:
How does this mock AIME compare to regular AIME?
58 Votes
10%
(6)
2%
(1)
31%
(18)
26%
(15)
31%
(18)
Hide Results Show Results
You must be signed in to vote.
So here are the problems, answers are due by Sunday, December 11th, 2005, 8:00 PM EST. Have fun!

PM or IM me your answers.
Attachments:
Mock AIME 2.pdf (57kb)
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by beta, Dec 5, 2005, 2:57 AM
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#2 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
I love the poll distribution so far :D
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#3 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, WiseTigerJ1
Okay, so far only 2 people have submitted answers. Yeah I realized this is a horrible time in the year for something like this. Therefore, the deadline will be extended to Sunday, December 11th, 2005, 8:00 PM EST.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
zanttrang
638 posts
#4 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, WiseTigerJ1
I'm definitely going to take the exam - I just haven't gotten time yet; probably I'll do it tomorrow.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
JesusFreak197
1939 posts
#5 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
I will do it when I am next free. :)
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Altheman
6194 posts
#6 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
i want to take it, but i usually don't have a 3 hour block of free time
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
zanttrang
638 posts
#7 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
Altheman wrote:
i want to take it, but i usually don't have a 3 hour block of free time
Then take it in smaller blocks, and just make sure that you only work on it for a total of three hours.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#8 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
zanttrang wrote:
Altheman wrote:
i want to take it, but i usually don't have a 3 hour block of free time
Then take it in smaller blocks, and just make sure that you only work on it for a total of three hours.

Yeah do that if it works better for you, right now I just need people sending in answers, :lol: .
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
1234567890
1553 posts
#9 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
Dec 11, now, right?
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#10 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
yes, it is december 11th.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
JesusFreak197
1939 posts
#11 • 4 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
Nevermind, I'm not taking it. I looked over the first few problems, and it's way harder than the standard AIME, not to mention a huge overabundance of geometry problems. I'm not going to spend my time doing something like this. It took me 20 minutes to get #1. :dry:
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
chess64
4794 posts
#12 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
Who was the liar who voted easy? :rotfl:
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#13 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, WiseTigerJ1
JesusFreak197 wrote:
Nevermind, I'm not taking it. I looked over the first few problems, and it's way harder than the standard AIME, not to mention a huge overabundance of geometry problems. I'm not going to spend my time doing something like this. It took me 20 minutes to get #1. :dry:

Yeah but 6 geometry problems is not exactly too many, check out 2004 AIME1
http://www.kalva.demon.co.uk/aime/aime04a.html. I agree that the first few problems are much harder than something on a regular AIME, sorry about that :( .

But what's wrong with it being too difficult (wouldn't it be a good practice then)?
Mildorf wrote:
My philosophy is that you should train, in part, for problems more difficult than the ones you will encounter, so I have made these mock contests extremely difficult. The idea is that, once you become acclimated to them, the real AIMEs will seem easier, and you will approach them with justifiable confidence
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
JesusFreak197
1939 posts
#14 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
beta wrote:
Yeah but 6 geometry problems is not exactly too many
Well, I was mostly looking at the first half or so of the test, and was a little frustrated by the abundance of geometry, which is by far my worst subject.
beta wrote:
But what's wrong with it being too difficult (wouldn't it be a good practice then)?
Mildorf wrote:
My philosophy is that you should train, in part, for problems more difficult than the ones you will encounter, so I have made these mock contests extremely difficult. The idea is that, once you become acclimated to them, the real AIMEs will seem easier, and you will approach them with justifiable confidence

I know I should practice the harder problems; I might do some off-and-on at some point. I don't know if I'm an unusual mathy person here, but I don't like spending a long time on problems when I'm not actually in a competition. On the previous mock AIME, I only spent one hour and fifty minutes on it because three hours is just too long to spend straight. I wasn't even going to do it all straight, but I'm not a big fan of individual problems in the first five that take 20 minutes to solve. :| Maybe I'll take a look at some of the later ones, except those are probably going to be even harder, anyway... =\
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Silverfalcon
5006 posts
#15 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, WiseTigerJ1
Thomas made an important point that it was important to work on the hard problems so the actual one will be a lot easier. This is how Barron's books are for SAT (I'm pretty positive that they're much harder than real SAT) but does that mean everyone who reads Barron's books get good grades on SAT? Not necessarily. This is same with Mock AMC. Although harder problems can benefit people, it may not benefit everyone.

Just for sidenote, don't worry too much about beta's geometry problems. They are tough problems but that's because he's good at geometry. If you can manage to solve all of them by yourself (which I can't, sadly), I'm pretty sure that you will be able to do most of the geometry problems on AIME by yourself.

beta, nice set of problems by the way! :)
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Altheman
6194 posts
#16 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
you should want to challenge yourself jesusfreak, and also, you should practice for the real thing by working the full 3 hours
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
JesusFreak197
1939 posts
#17 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, WiseTigerJ1
I very rarely have three free hours straight, and when I do, I'd rather do something other than math.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#18 • 4 Y
Y by Adventure10, Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
JesusFreak197 wrote:
I very rarely have three free hours straight, and when I do, I'd rather do something other than math.

Hmmm then why do you do math competitions if you don't like doing math?
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
JesusFreak197
1939 posts
#19 • 4 Y
Y by Adventure10, Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
I never said that. I enjoy doing math, but I don't like spending long periods of time straight on it.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
furious
370 posts
#20 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
JesusFreak197 wrote:
...I'd rather do something other than math.
:what?: like what? :P
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
calc rulz
1126 posts
#21 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
Yay! Now I can actually finish them! (too much homework this week....)
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Altheman
6194 posts
#22 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
wow, i just finished this, and it was really difficult, and on number 6, i kept getting an answer that did not fit the form of a,b,c, but oh well, and number 1 was a lot like the number 14 on the 2005 aime A? talk about difficult...
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#23 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
Altheman wrote:
wow, i just finished this, and it was really difficult, and on number 6, i kept getting an answer that did not fit the form of a,b,c, but oh well, and number 1 was a lot like the number 14 on the 2005 aime A? talk about difficult...

I don't want to give too much away but #1 is much simpler than 2005 AIME #14...
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
beta
3001 posts
#24 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
All answers are due today!
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
MockSolutionsCompiler
161 posts
#25 • 6 Y
Y by peace09, mathleticguyyy, BakedPotato66, Mango247, parmenides51, WiseTigerJ1
I know I'm bumping a thread after 17 years, but this mock hasn't been listed anywhere or talked about, so I think it is severely underappreciated.

Do not be fooled by this test's age. The difficulty is still on par with the harder real AIMEs from recent years. If you don't believe me, just try out the first 7-8 problems and you'll see.

And yeah, I wrote solutions, since I was in the mood to and I thoroughly enjoyed solving these:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/n434y3tiytfrzki/beta_Mock_AIME_Solutions.pdf?dl=0
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Arrowhead575
2281 posts
#26 • 4 Y
Y by Mango247, Mango247, Mango247, WiseTigerJ1
wow p13 :blush:

only thing bad abt this test is that 7/15 are geo
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by Arrowhead575, Aug 6, 2022, 2:59 PM
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Michael1129
285 posts
#27 • 1 Y
Y by WiseTigerJ1
just did a couple of problems
and def recommend
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
parmenides51
30653 posts
#28 • 1 Y
Y by WiseTigerJ1
MockSolutionsCompiler wrote:
I know I'm bumping a thread after 17 years, but this mock hasn't been listed anywhere or talked about, so I think it is severely underappreciated.

Do not be fooled by this test's age. The difficulty is still on par with the harder real AIMEs from recent years. If you don't believe me, just try out the first 7-8 problems and you'll see.

And yeah, I wrote solutions, since I was in the mood to and I thoroughly enjoyed solving these:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/n434y3tiytfrzki/beta_Mock_AIME_Solutions.pdf?dl=0

attached those solutions

(problems are to be posted in separate threads in HSM in a while)
Attachments:
beta_Mock_AIME_Solutions.pdf (197kb)
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by parmenides51, Jan 28, 2024, 2:50 PM
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
parmenides51
30653 posts
#29 • 1 Y
Y by WiseTigerJ1
all problems have been posted in separate threads in HSM, I just created the related post collection

here

enjoy / start solving

USA mocks here (also mentioned here)
more AIME mocks here
more User-created contests here (contains all above)
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
Squidget
433 posts
#30 • 1 Y
Y by WiseTigerJ1
19 years, and @beta’s legacy lives.

GO AIME people!!!!!!
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
ab456
223 posts
#31
Y by
Gosh this thread was made when I was less than two months old.
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
sylviaj456
349 posts
#32
Y by
this thread was made when i was -4 years old
Z K Y
The post below has been deleted. Click to close.
This post has been deleted. Click here to see post.
P_Groudon
871 posts
#33 • 1 Y
Y by parmenides51
By the way, there is a results thread, which contains answers and solve rates:

https://artofproblemsolving.com/community/c5h65552
Z K Y
N Quick Reply
G
H
=
a