Discrete Math Combinatorics. How many x in N such that 3 cdot 10^13<x<10^14? and one of the numbers 1, 2,. . . , 9 exactly once and no zeros next to each other?

Ismael Molina

Ismael Molina

Answered question

2022-07-17

How many x N such that 3 10 13 < x < 10 14 ?
and one of the numbers 1, 2,. . . , 9 exactly once and no zeros next to each other?

Answer & Explanation

kitskjeja

kitskjeja

Beginner2022-07-18Added 13 answers

Step 1
We know that x can take 10 14 3 × 10 13 1 = 7 × 10 13 1 values. x thus has 14 digits. Take the digits of x as
ABABABABABABAB
where A represents the places reserved for non-zero digits and B represents places where zeroes are allowed along with non-zero digits. There are 7 A′s so out of the 9 digits, for the first digit we have 6 choices and as the order is important for the other digits we have 8P6 choices for the remaining 6 A′s. Now for the B′s. We still have 2 remaining digits. We can choose any 2 digits in ( 9 2 ) and so we can place these digits in ( 7 2 ) . So, the total number of ways or number of numbers that x can take is = 6 × 8 P 6 × ( 9 2 ) × ( 7 2 ) .

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