Combination: Difference between revisions
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* [[Combinatorics]] | * [[Combinatorics]] | ||
* [[Combinatorial_identity]] | |||
* [[Permutations]] | * [[Permutations]] | ||
* [[Pascal's Triangle]] | * [[Pascal's Triangle]] | ||
* [[Generating_function]] | * [[Generating_function]] | ||
Revision as of 20:10, 3 November 2007
| This is an AoPSWiki Word of the Week for Nov 1-7 |
A combination is a way of choosing
objects from a set of
where the order in which the objects are chosen is irrelevant. We are generally concerned with finding the number of combinations of size
from an original set of size
Notation
The common forms of denoting the number of combinations of
objects from a set of
objects is:
Formula
Derivation
Consider the set of letters A, B, and C. There are
different permutations of those letters. Since order doesn't matter with combinations, there is only one combination of those three. In general, since for every permutation of
objects from
elements
, there are
more ways to permute them than to choose them. We have
, or
.
Formulas/Identities
One of the many proofs is by first inserting
in to the binomial theorem. Because the combinations are the coefficients of
, and a and b cancel out because they are 1, the sum is
.



