Discrete math three fundamental principles. Suppose that there are 15 identical copies of The Great Gastby and 12 distinct biographies on a bookshelf. (a) How many different selections of 12 books are possible? (b) How many different selections of 10 books are possible?

tamolam8

tamolam8

Answered question

2022-09-05

Discrete math three fundamental principles
Suppose that there are 15 identical copies of The Great Gastby and 12 distinct biographies on a bookshelf.
(a) How many different selections of 12 books are possible?
(b) How many different selections of 10 books are possible?
I figured out (a)
2 12 = 4096
But I'm stuck on b.<br<I tried 2 10 = 1024 but thats not the answer.

Answer & Explanation

madirans2m

madirans2m

Beginner2022-09-06Added 17 answers

Step 1
In order to find the ways of picking books, you're counting the number of ways to pick k biographies at a time, as the other books are identical. So, in the first case this is
k = 0 12 ( 12 k ) = 2 12 = 4096
Step 2
In the second case, it isn't possible to pick 12 or 11 of the biographies, so we subtract these choices off:
4096 ( 12 12 ) ( 12 11 ) = 4096 1 12 = 4083

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