krypticlemonjuice
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- Jun 24, 2023
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- 2023
dont laugh at me how do u do part iiView attachment 40489
in line 4 of my working: i expanded n! in numerator and (n-k)! in denominator and u can see that i cancelled out the terms... thats how the answer comes out to be
Yes I'm pretty sure it's 6!. You lock in the host and hostess, and then arrange the guests around them. The guests can be arranged in 6! ways. The reason why we don't multiply 6! by 2! (due to the misconception that the host and hostess swapping places will give new cases) is because of this:is it just like u take them being opposite as one count, so then its 7 ways so its just 6!
thats so wierd
oh my mistake i thought for a second the host and hostess were included in the 6 people !lock the position of the host and the hostess and so there are 2! ways of placing the host and hostess (they can swap)
now look at the remaining 4 people. they can be arranged normally in 4! ways
if i am correct then its 4! times 2! = 48 ways
otherwise i suck at combinatorics (i actually hate this topic ngl)
wait which paper is this?View attachment 40488View attachment 40487
For this question, and in the second photo, the solution, can someone please explain how they expanded it to get that??? I'm confused
Nsg 2023wait which paper is this?
my bad.. you are correctIt is 6!, not 6! x 2.
Seat the host in any seat in 1 way (all seats are equivalent under rotation).
The seven seats remaining are now all different, but there is only one of them in which the hostess can be seated.
The remaining 6 people can be seated in 6! ways.
So, # ways = 1 x 1 x 6! = 6!