Answer: 39 years
Step-by-step explanation:
The father says that adding both of the digits in his age will be 3 times greater than adding both digits <u>one year later</u>. Before we even start answering the problem, this tells us that the father's age has 2 digits in it.
Let's represent the 10's digit with <em>x</em>, and the 1's digit with <em>y</em>. If the father's age was 45, for example, x would be 4 and y would be 5.
Let's first make an equation to represent this situation:
The sum of the digits of the father's age would be represented by x + y, as x and y are the 10's digit and 1's digit respectively.
The father's age next year would be <u>one greater than the current year</u>, which makes y become y + 1. Then, the sum of the digits would be x + y + 1.
Now, we must make the first equation 3 times larger than the second and solve for the sum.
However, we can neither have a fraction or a negative as a sum of two digits in an age, as digits are always <u>positive integers from 0 to 9</u>.
This flaw came from the assumption that after 1 year, the sum of the digits will be x + y + 1. This isn't always true, as any number with its 1's digit of 9 turns into 0 the next year, and not 10. Instead, the x value increases by 1.
For example, someone the age 69 becomes 70 the next year, x increases by 1 and y becomes 0.
Let's make a new equation to try and see this.
We know that his current age has to have y = 9 for his new age to be y = 0. Therefore, the current sum of digits is x + 9.
The next year, we know that the 10's place will increase by 1 and the 1's place becomes 0. Therefore the sum of digits is x + 1 + 0, or x + 1.
Since the current sum of digits is 3 times greater than the sum next year, let's multiply the second equation by 3 to get equality. We just need to calculate the 10's digit, as the 1's digit is already 9.
Since the 10's digit (or x) is 3 and the 1's digit (or y) is 9, the father's age is 39, and he will turn 40 next year.