I want a free lunch (1 Viewer)

spatula232

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So yesterday our math teacher said if we could solve this, he'd buy us lunch...

How many solutions to:
a+b+c+d=6
Where a, b, c and d are positive integers (can be 0), and the same number can be repeated (i.e. a, b, c and d could all equal 1)
 

InteGrand

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So yesterday our math teacher said if we could solve this, he'd buy us lunch...

How many solutions to:
a+b+c+d=6
Where a, b, c and d are positive integers (can be 0), and the same number can be repeated (i.e. a, b, c and d could all equal 1)
Kind of cheap if you don't solve it yourself and ask for lunch. lol
 

sheroom

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Give me 10 minutes I can figure this one out and give an equation that you can use.
 

kawaiipotato

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What Integrand said.l
But
A similar question could be
How many ways can you place 'n' cats into 'n-2' cages?
 

BlueGas

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lol, you should have not posted that you'll get "free lunch" so you'll actually get help haha.
 

Drsoccerball

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So yesterday our math teacher said if we could solve this, he'd buy us lunch...

How many solutions to:
a+b+c+d=6
Where a, b, c and d are positive integers (can be 0), and the same number can be repeated (i.e. a, b, c and d could all equal 1)
As my physics teacher says, "In this universe there is no free lunch"
 

Drongoski

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I think this is a Partitioning = Occupancy problem. 84 is correct.

For this question:

No of ways =
 
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