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Chapter 2 Combinatorial Methods Wen-Guey Tzeng Computer Science Department National Chiao Tung University Introduction • If the sample space is finite and outcomes are all equally likely, then P(A)= N(A)/N(S) • We study combinatorial analysis with the method of counting. 2016 Fall 2 Counting principle • Ei has ni elements, 1 i m. There are n1n2…nm ways of choosing an element from each set Ei 2016 Fall 3 • How many outcomes are there if we throw 5 dice? Sol: • Let Ei = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}, 1 i 5 2016 Fall 4 • In tossing 4 fair dice, P(at least one 3 among these 4 dice)=? Sol: • Let A = at least one 3 among these 4 dice • Consider Ac = 2016 Fall 5 • Virginia wants to give her son, Brian, 14 different baseball cards within a 7-day period. If Virginia gives Brian cards no more than once a day, in how many ways can this be done? • Sol: • Each card is given in a day. • Ei={1, 2, …, 7}, 1 i 14. • Sample space 2016 Fall 6 • Standard birthday problem P(at least two among n people have the same birthday)=? • S = {(d1, d2, …, dn) | 1 di 365} • A = at least two share the same birthday • Ac = 2016 Fall 7 2016 Fall 8 Tree diagram method:events occur in temporal order • Bill and John keep playing chess until one wins two games in a row or three games altogether. How many ways that Bill wins without winning two in a row? Note: not all branches are equiprobable. 2016 Fall 9 • Mark has $4. He decides to bet $1 on the flip of a fair coin 4 times. What is the probability that • • 2016 Fall He breaks even. He wins money. 10 Permutations • r-element arrangement nPr: an ordered arrangement of r objects from a set A containing n different objects. nPr = n(n-1)(n-2)…(n-r+1) = n!/(n-r)! • The order is important. 2016 Fall 11 • 3 people, Brown, Smith, and Jones, must be scheduled for job interviews. In how many different orders can this be done? 2016 Fall 12 • 2 anthropology, 4 computer science, 3 statistics, 3 biology, and 5 music books are put on a bookshelf with a random arrangement. What is the probability that the books of the same subject are together? 2016 Fall 13 • If 5 boys and 5 girls sit in a row in a random order, P(no two children of the same sex sit together)=? 2016 Fall 14 Theorem: The number of distinguishable permutations of n objects of k different types, where type i has ni objects, and n=n1+n2+…+nk, is n! n1! n2!... nk ! 2016 Fall 15 • How many different 10-letter codes can be made using 3 a’s, 4 b’s, and 3 c’s? 2016 Fall 16 • A fair coin is flipped 10 times. P(exactly 3 heads)=? 2016 Fall 17 Combinations • r-element combination nCr: an un-ordered arrangement of r objects from a set A containing n different objects, nCr = n!/(n-r)!r! • The order is not important. 2016 Fall 18 • In how many ways can 2 math and 3 biology books be selected from 8 math and 6 biology books? 2016 Fall 19 • In a small town, 11 of the 25 school teachers are against abortion, 8 are for abortion, and the rest are indifferent. A random sample of 5 school teachers is selected for an interview. • P(all 5 are for abortion) = ? • P(all 5 have the same opinion) = ? 2016 Fall 20 • In Maryland’s lottery, player pick 6 integers between 1 and 49, order of selection being irrelevant. • P(Grand prize)=? • P(2nd prize)=? • P(3rd prize)=? 2016 Fall 21 • A professor wrote n letters and sealed them in n envelopes randomly. P(at least one letter was addressed correctly)=? Hint: • Consider n=1, 2, 3, … • Let Ei be the event that the ith letter is addressed correctly. • Compute P(E1E2 … En) by inclusion-exclusion principle . 2016 Fall 22