Poker and Combinatorics (Don't Mix): How to solve this problem? Does anyone know the solution to th

manierato5h

manierato5h

Answered question

2022-06-21

Poker and Combinatorics (Don't Mix): How to solve this problem?
Does anyone know the solution to this problem? I'm not sure if it's asking to find the cardinality first, and whether I should use the additive counting principle or the multiplicative one? Would help me a lot, thanks!
Given is a standard 52-card poker game. A hand is a non-ordered selection of five Cards from the game. Consider the following question and the answer to it:
Question: How many hands are there that have all four colors?
Answer: We choose a card from each color, so there are ( 13 4 ) possibilities for this. 48 possibilities remain when we choose the fifth card. So there are a total of ( 13 4 ) × 48 hands that contain all four suits.
Is the solution correct? If not, what is wrong with the answer and what is the correct solution?

Answer & Explanation

Dustin Durham

Dustin Durham

Beginner2022-06-22Added 31 answers

Step 1
Imagine that we wanted to pick k diamonds, l hearts, m clubs and n spades. Since we have 13 total cards of each suit, we can do this in ( 13 k ) ( 13 l ) ( 13 m ) ( 13 n ) ways.
Now, if we want 5 cards that contain all the suits, we can separate it into 4 disjoint cases:
1. 2 diamonds, 1 heart, 1 club, 1 spade
2. 1 diamond, 2 hearts, 1 club, 1 spade
3. 1 diamond, 1 heart, 2 clubs, 1 spade
4. 1 diamond, 1 heart, 1 club, 2 spades
Step 2
Each of these cases separately (up to the ordering of the factors) contributes with ( 13 2 ) ( 13 1 ) ( 13 1 ) ( 13 1 ) choices for the total of 4 ( 13 2 ) ( 13 1 ) ( 13 1 ) ( 13 1 ) = 4 13 3 ( 13 2 ) ..
gvaldytist

gvaldytist

Beginner2022-06-23Added 12 answers

Step 1
When you first choose 4 cards of different colors and then multiply by 48, it brings in duplicates. So one of the correct approaches would be - 4 13 3 ( 13 2 )
Step 2
Explanation: Choose one of the four colors that you will have two cards of, choose two cards of that color and one card each of rest three colors.

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