Thank you so much, i cannot covey how grateful i am for this.For this one, you would follow the same steps as the previous question BUT minus it from the unrestricted total
Complementary event: total which is (8-1)!- ways(they sit together)
so (8-1)! - (2! x (7-1)!)
Thanks so much, really appreciate all of this helpNot sure if this is completely the right intuition (been a while since I did perms and comms):
The first boy has a fixed position (so has 1 option; wherever you choose).
The other boy has 2 places he cannot sit (either side of the first boy); so has 8 (total) - 2 (either side of 1st boy) - 1 (first boy's spot) = 5 spots.
Remaining 6 people have 6! ways they can arrange themselves.
So 1 x 5 x 6! = 3600 ways.
Could you let me know if this is the right answer ... I'm not 100% with my reasoning.
yep, that's the right answer, just a different way of doing itNot sure if this is completely the right intuition (been a while since I did perms and comms):
The first boy has a fixed position (so has 1 option; wherever you choose).
The other boy has 2 places he cannot sit (either side of the first boy); so has 8 (total) - 2 (either side of 1st boy) - 1 (first boy's spot) = 5 spots.
Remaining 6 people have 6! ways they can arrange themselves.
So 1 x 5 x 6! = 3600 ways.
Could you let me know if this is the right answer ... I'm not 100% with my reasoning.
Don't worry ... I checked B1andB2 answer and it ends up also being 3,600 but with a different style of approaching it. Either way, they both get the answer, so that's all that mattersThanks so much, really appreciate all of this help
also sir you have got the correct answer.Not sure if this is completely the right intuition (been a while since I did perms and comms):
The first boy has a fixed position (so has 1 option; wherever you choose).
The other boy has 2 places he cannot sit (either side of the first boy); so has 8 (total) - 2 (either side of 1st boy) - 1 (first boy's spot) = 5 spots.
Remaining 6 people have 6! ways they can arrange themselves.
So 1 x 5 x 6! = 3600 ways.
Could you let me know if this is the right answer ... I'm not 100% with my reasoning.