Permute 3 V3 1 6

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Permute v3 to v4, swapping the 0th and 1st elements, and the 2nd and 3rd ones. Take the max again, i.e. V5 = max(v3,v4). Now v5 contains the horizontal max in all of its components. Permutation Problem 1. Choose 3 horses from group of 4 horses. In a race of 15 horses you beleive that you know the best 4 horses and that 3 of them will finish in the top spots: win, place and show (1st, 2nd and 3rd). So out of that set of 4 horses you want to pick the subset of 3 winners and the order in which they finish.



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A permutation is an arrangement, or listing, of objects in which the order is important. In this lesson, we will look at examples of the number of permutations of n things taken n at a time.
In another lesson, we will consider the number of permutations of n things taken r at a time.

Example :

Suppose we want to take a picture of three boys, Allen, Bryan and Carlos. In how many ways can the boys be arranged?

Solution:

They can be arranged in any of several ways.

Allen Bryan Carlos
Allen Carlos Bryan
Bryan Allen Carlos
Bryan Carlos Allen
Carlos Allen Bryan
Carlos Bryan Allen

There are 3 choices for the first boy, 2 choices for the second and 1 choice for the third, so the total number of permutations is 3 x 2 x 1 = 6. The 3 boys can be arranged in 6 ways.

In this example, the symbol P(3, 3) represents the number of permutations of 3 things taken 3 at a time.

P(3, 3) = 3 × 2 × 1 = 6

Example:

In how many ways can 6 people be seated in a row of 6 chairs?

Solution:

We can use the permutation formula P(6, 6) which is 6 things taken 6 at a time.

P(6, 6) = 6 × 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1

Six people can be seated in 720 ways.

Permute 3 v3 1 6 speed

Example:

In how many ways can seven different books be arranged on the shelf?

Solution:

We can use the permutation formula P(7, 7) which is 6 things taken 6 at a time.

P(7, 7) = 7 × 6 × 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1

The books can be arranged in 5,040 ways.

The following video gives another example of the permutation problem.

Try the free Mathway calculator and problem solver below to practice various math topics. Try the given examples, or type in your own problem and check your answer with the step-by-step explanations.

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24

BY THE PERMUTATIONS of the letters abc we mean all of their possible arrangements:

abc

acb

bac

bca

Permute 3 V3 1 6 Pro

cab

cba

There are 6 permutations of three different things. As the number of things (letters) increases, their permutations grow astronomically. For example, if twelve different things are permuted, then the number of their permutations is 479,001,600.

Now, this enormous number was not found by counting them. It is derived theoretically from the Fundamental Principle of Counting:

If something can be chosen, or can happen, or be done, in m different ways, and, after that has happened, something else can be chosen in n different ways, then the number of ways of choosing both of them is m·n.

For example, imagine putting the letters a, b, c, d into a hat, and then drawing two of them in succession. We can draw the first in 4 different ways: either a or b or c or d. After that has happened, there are 3 ways to choose the second. That is, to each of those 4 ways there correspond 3. Therefore, there are 4· 3 or 12 possible ways to choose two letters from four.

abbacada
acbccbdb
adbdcddc

ab means that a was chosen first and b second; ba means that b was chosen first and a second; and so on.

Let us now consider the total number of permutations of all four letters. There are 4 ways to choose the first. 3 ways remain to choose the second, 2 ways to choose the third, and 1 way to choose the last. Therefore the number of permutations of 4 different things is

4· 3· 2· 1 = 24

Thus the number of permutations of 4 different things taken 4 at a time is 4!. (See Topic 19.)

(To say 'taken 4 at a time' is a convention. We mean, '4! is the number of permutations of 4 different things taken from a total of 4 different things.')

In general,

The number of permutations of n different things taken n at a time
is n!.

Example 1. Five different books are on a shelf. In how many different ways could you arrange them?

Answer. 5! = 1· 2· 3· 4· 5 = 120

Example 2. There are 6! permutations of the 6 letters of the word square.

a) In how many of them is r the second letter? _ r _ _ _ _

b) In how many of them are q and e next to each other?

Solution.

a) Let r be the second letter. Then there are 5 ways to fill the first spot. After that has happened, there are 4 ways to fill the third, 3 to fill the fourth, and so on. There are 5! such permutations.

b) Let q and e be next to each other as qe. Then we will be permuting the 5 units qe, s, u a, r.. They have 5! permutations. But q and e could be together as eq. Therefore, the total number of ways they can be next to each other is 2· 5! = 240.

Permutations of less than all

We have seen that the number of ways of choosing 2 letters from 4 is 4· 3 = 12. We call this

'The number of permutations of 4 different things taken 2 at a time.'

We will symbolize this as 4P2:

4P2 = 4· 3

Permute 3 V3 1 6 Cc

The lower index 2 indicates the number of factors. The upper index 4 indicates the first factor.

For example, 8P3 means 'the number of permutations of 8 different things taken 3 at a time.' And

8P3 = 8· 7· 6
= 56· 6
= 50· 6 + 6· 6
= 336

For, there are 8 ways to choose the first, 7 ways to choose the second, and 6 ways to choose the third.

In general,

nPk = n(n − 1)(n − 2)··· to k factors

Factorial representation

We saw in the Topic on factorials,

8!
5!
= 8· 7· 6

5! is a factor of 8!, and therefore the 5!'s cancel.

Now, 8· 7· 6 is 8P3. We see, then, that 8P3 can be expressed in terms of factorials as

In general, the number of arrangements -- permutations -- of n things taken k at a time, can be represented as follows:

Permute 3 V3 1 6 By Devilbro

nPk = n!
(nk)!
. . . . . . . . . . . .(1)

The upper factorial is the upper index of P, while the lower factorial is the difference of the indices.

Example 3. Express 10P4 in terms of factorials.

Solution. 10P4 = 10!
6!

The upper factorial is the upper index, and the lower factorial is the difference of the indices. When the 6!'s cancel, the numerator becomes 10· 9· 8· 7.

This is the number of permutations of 10 different things taken 4 at a time.

Example 4. Calculate nPn.

Solution. nPn = n!
(nn)!
= n!
0!
= n!
1
= n!

nPn is the number of permutations of n different things taken n at a time -- it is the total number of permutations of n things: n!. The definition 0! = 1 makes line (1) above valid for all values of k: k = 0, 1, 2, . . . , n.

Problem 1. Write down all the permutations of xyz.

To see the answer, pass your mouse over the colored area.
To cover the answer again, click 'Refresh' ('Reload').

xyz, xzy, yxz, yzx, zxy, zyx.

Problem 2. How many permutations are there of the letters pqrs?

4! = 1· 2· 3· 4 = 24

Problem 3. a) How many different arrangements are there of the letters of the word numbers?

7! = 5,040

b) How many of those arrangements have b as the first letter?

Set b as the first letter, and permute the remaining 6. Therefore, there are 6! such arrangements.

c) How many have b as the last letter -- or in any specified position?

The same. 6!.

d) How many will have n, u, and m together?

Begin by permuting the 5 things -- num, b, e, r, s. They will have 5! permutations. But in each one of them, there are 3! rearrangements of num. Consequently, the total number of arrangements in which n, u, and m are together, is 3!· 5! = 6· 120 = 720.

Problem 4. a) How many different arrangements (permutations) are there of the digits 01234?

5! = 120

b) How many 5-digit numbers can you make of those digits, in which the

b) first digit is not 0, and no digit is repeated?

Since 0 cannot be first, remove it. Then there will be 4 ways to choose the first digit. Now replace 0. It will now be one of 4 remaining digits. Therefore, there will be 4 ways to fill the second spot, 3 ways to fill the third, and so on. The total number of 5-digit numbers, then, is 4· 4! = 4· 24 = 96.

c) How many 5-digit odd numbers can you make with 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, and
c) no digit is repeated?

Again, 0 cannot be first, so remove it. Since the number must be odd, it must end in either 1 or 3. Place 1, then, in the last position. _ _ _ _ 1. Therefore, for the first position, we may choose either 2, 3, or 4, so that there are 3 ways to choose the first digit. Now replace 0. Hence, there will be 3 ways to choose the second position, 2 ways to choose the third, and 1 way to choose the fourth. Therefore, the total number of odd numbers that end in 1, is 3· 3· 2· 1 = 18. The same analysis holds if we place 3 in the last position, so that the total number of odd numbers is 2· 18 = 36.

Problem 5.

a) If the five letters a, b, c, d, e are put into a hat, in how many different
a) ways could you draw one out? 5

b) When one of them has been drawn, in how many ways could you
a) draw a second? 4

c) Therefore, in how many ways could you draw two letters? 5· 4 = 20

This number is denoted by 5P2.

d) What is the meaning of the symbol 5P3?

The number of permutations of 5 different things taken 3 at a time.

e) Evaluate 5P3. 5· 4· 3 = 60

Problem 6. Evaluate

a) 6P3= 120 b) 10P2= 90

c) 7P5= 2520

Problem 7. Express with factorials.

a) nPkn!
(nk)!
b) 12P712!
5!
c) 8P28!
6!
d) mP0m!
m!

See Permutations with Some Identical Elements


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