Discrete math counting question help. 100 students from each of the 3 schools form a line. For each student (except the 1st and the last), the two neighboring students must be from 2 schools different than his/her school. The 1st and last student in the line must have his/her neighboring student from a school different than his/her school. How many ways are there to form such a line of 300 students?

Randall Booker

Randall Booker

Answered question

2022-09-04

Discrete math counting question help
100 students from each of the 3 schools form a line. For each student (except the 1st and the last), the two neighboring students must be from 2 schools different than his/her school. The 1st and last student in the line must have his/her neighboring student from a school different than his/her school. How many ways are there to form such a line of 300 students?

Answer & Explanation

Ashlee Ramos

Ashlee Ramos

Beginner2022-09-05Added 20 answers

Step 1
You can pick the school of the first student (three choices). Then you can pick the school for the second student (two choices). From then on the school of the stiudent is determined.
Step 2
Within a school we have 100!, so the answer is 6 100 ! 3

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