Doctor PJ Member 7+ Year Member 15+ Year Member 20+ Year Member Joined May 5, 2003 Messages 247 Reaction score 0 Points 0 Location Florida Aug 6, 2008 #1 Advertisement - Members don't see this ad How many arrangements can 6 people be seated around a circular table? Answer is 120, but shouldn't it be 720? 6!
Advertisement - Members don't see this ad How many arrangements can 6 people be seated around a circular table? Answer is 120, but shouldn't it be 720? 6!
D ddsbruin Full Member 10+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Joined Aug 6, 2008 Messages 137 Reaction score 0 Points 4,531 Location CA Dentist Aug 6, 2008 #2 Quick formula for "how many ways around a round table" probability questions is (n-1)! so 6-1 = 5! = 120 Upvote 0 Downvote
Quick formula for "how many ways around a round table" probability questions is (n-1)! so 6-1 = 5! = 120
Doctor PJ Member 7+ Year Member 15+ Year Member 20+ Year Member Joined May 5, 2003 Messages 247 Reaction score 0 Points 0 Location Florida Aug 6, 2008 #3 thanks bruin, didn't know that till now!🙂 Upvote 0 Downvote
joonkimdds Senior Member 10+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Joined Jun 30, 2005 Messages 2,780 Reaction score 2 Points 4,571 Pre-Dental Aug 6, 2008 #4 it doesn't say how many chairs are available. if it says only 5 chairs are available, the method of getting the answer would be totally different. Upvote 0 Downvote
it doesn't say how many chairs are available. if it says only 5 chairs are available, the method of getting the answer would be totally different.
S Streetwolf Ultra Senior Member Verified Member 10+ Year Member Dentist 15+ Year Member Joined Oct 25, 2006 Messages 1,801 Reaction score 7 Points 4,571 Location NJ Dentist Aug 6, 2008 #5 ddsbruin said: Quick formula for "how many ways around a round table" probability questions is (n-1)! so 6-1 = 5! = 120 Click to expand... Quick formula is (nPr) / r where r is the number of seats. In many cases you actually have n = r and this reduces the problem down to (n-1)!. Upvote 0 Downvote
ddsbruin said: Quick formula for "how many ways around a round table" probability questions is (n-1)! so 6-1 = 5! = 120 Click to expand... Quick formula is (nPr) / r where r is the number of seats. In many cases you actually have n = r and this reduces the problem down to (n-1)!.
D ddsbruin Full Member 10+ Year Member 15+ Year Member Joined Aug 6, 2008 Messages 137 Reaction score 0 Points 4,531 Location CA Dentist Aug 6, 2008 #6 Thanks streetwolf, use his formula. mine was only good for as he said when n=r. Upvote 0 Downvote