Problem
First name
Jay
School
St Helens C of E Primary, Abbotsham
Country
Age
10
I started with the number 3, there are only two ways to make 3: 0+3 or 1+2.
I found 1+2 and got two combinations:
7 = 4+3; 8 = 0+8; 13 = 7+6; 14 = 5+9; 3 = 1+2
7 = 7+0; 8 = 3+5; 13 = 4+9; 14 = 6+8; 3 = 1+2
With 0+3 there is only one combination:
7 = 5+2; 8 = 1+7; 13 = 9+4; 14 = 6+8; 3 = 0+3
I do not think there are any other combinations because you would need two of some of the numbers to make the other totals.