This document discusses permutations and combinations, which are counting methods used to determine the number of possible outcomes when selecting objects from a set without regard for order (combinations) or when order is important (permutations). Permutations count the number of ways objects can be arranged, while combinations count the number of ways objects can be selected without regard to order. The document provides examples of calculating permutations and combinations for different sized sets and selected groups.
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This document discusses permutations and combinations, which are counting methods used to determine the number of possible outcomes when selecting objects from a set without regard for order (combinations) or when order is important (permutations). Permutations count the number of ways objects can be arranged, while combinations count the number of ways objects can be selected without regard to order. The document provides examples of calculating permutations and combinations for different sized sets and selected groups.
This document discusses permutations and combinations, which are counting methods used to determine the number of possible outcomes when selecting objects from a set without regard for order (combinations) or when order is important (permutations). Permutations count the number of ways objects can be arranged, while combinations count the number of ways objects can be selected without regard to order. The document provides examples of calculating permutations and combinations for different sized sets and selected groups.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
This document discusses permutations and combinations, which are counting methods used to determine the number of possible outcomes when selecting objects from a set without regard for order (combinations) or when order is important (permutations). Permutations count the number of ways objects can be arranged, while combinations count the number of ways objects can be selected without regard to order. The document provides examples of calculating permutations and combinations for different sized sets and selected groups.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd