Well done Robert of Madras College, St Andrew's, Scotland and
Andrei of School No. 205, Bucharest, Romania for your solutions
to this problem.
In both parts of this question we consider the limiting case of a
process which is repeated infinitely often and things are not
what they might seem to be.
(a) In a square $ABCD$ with sides of length 1 unit a path is
drawn from $A$ to the opposite corner $C$ so that all the steps
in the path are either parallel to $AB$ or parallel to $BC$ and
not necessarily equal steps. If we draw paths of this sort
putting in more and more and more steps the length of the path is
always the same."

The steps parallel to $AB$ together must stretch all the way
across from $A$ to $B$ and the steps parallel to $BC$ together
must stretch all the way up from $A$ to $D$. Irrespective of the
number of small steps, A point moving on any path of this type
moves a total of 1 unit parallel to $AB$ and a total of one unit
parallel to $BC$, hence a total of 2 units altogether. With more
and more steps the path gets closer and closer to the diagonal so
you might expect the length to converge to $\sqrt 2$.
Surprisingly the length is always 2 units and not even close to
$\sqrt 2$ units.
(b) Now consider the graphs of $y={1\over 2^n}\sin 2^nx$ for $n=
1,2,3, ...$ and $0\leq x \leq 2\pi$. As $n$\ tends to infinity
the graphs oscillate more and more and get closer and closer to
the $x$ axis. We have to prove that the length of the curve from
$x=0$ to $x=2 \pi$ is the same for all values of $n$. The hint
says we don't need to calculate the length of the path here and
we should think about scale factors.

The graph of $G_n:\ y={1\over 2^n}\sin 2^nx$ from $x=0$ to
$x=\pi$ is similar to the graph of $G_{n-1}:\ y={1\over
2^{n-1}}\sin 2^{n-1}x$ from $x=0$ to $x=2\pi$\ but scaled down by
a linear scale factor of 1/2 so $G_n$ is half the length of
$G_{n-1}$. However $G_n$ is repeated twice periodically between
$x=0$ and $x=2\pi$ so the two pieces together have the same
length as $G_{n-1}$.
This shows that all these graphs on $0\leq x \leq 2\pi$ have the
same length although as $n\rightarrow \infty$ the graphs get
closer and closer to the $x$ axis so you might suppose that the
length converges to $2\pi$. Surprisingly the length is always the
same and much more than $2\pi$.