Back to Use permutations and combinations to compute probabilities — Problem 1 · Task Set 26

Exercises: Use Permutations and Combinations to Compute Probabilities

Work through each section in order. Before computing a count, ask the deciding question: "If I swap two of my chosen items, is it a DIFFERENT outcome?" If yes, order matters — use a permutation, nPr = n!/(n - r)!. If no, order does not matter — use a combination, nCr = nPr / r! = n!/(r!(n - r)!). For probabilities, count the favorable and the total the SAME way (both ordered or both unordered).

Grade 11·20 problems·~35 min·Common Core Math - HS Statistics and Probability·group·hss-cp-b-9
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Warm-Up: Counting Principle, Factorials, and Order

These problems review the counting building blocks.

1.

A deli offers 3 kinds of bread and 5 kinds of filling. A sandwich is one bread and one filling. By the Fundamental Counting Principle, how many different sandwiches are possible?