adthedaddy wrote:What is the total number of ways of selecting twenty balls from an infinite number of blue, green and
yellow balls?
1. 3^20
2. 20^3
3. 231
4. 1771
The problem above is no different from the following:
On a table are 3 boxes: a blue box, a green box and a yellow box. How many ways can 20 identical balls be distributed among the 3 boxes?
Placing 5 balls in the blue box, 5 balls in the green box, and 10 balls in the yellow box = selecting 5 blue balls, 5 green balls, and 10 yellow balls in the problem above.
To solve, we can use the SEPARATOR method.
The 20 identical balls are to be separated into -- at most -- 3 groupings.
Thus, we need 20 balls and two separators:
OOOOOOOO|OOOOOOO|OOOOO
Each arrangement of the elements above represents one way to distribute the 20 balls among three boxes B, Y and G:
OOOOOOOO|OOOOOOO|OOOOO = B gets 8 balls, Y gets 7 balls, G gets 5 balls.
OO||OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO = B gets 2 balls, Y gets 0 balls, G gets 18 balls.
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO|| = B gets all 20 balls.
And so on.
To count all of the possible distributions, we simply need to count the number of ways to arrange the 22 elements above (the 20 identical balls and the two identical separators).
The number of ways to arrange 22 elements = 22!.
But when an arrangement includes identical elements, we must divide by the number of ways to arrange the identical elements.
The reason:
When the identical elements swap positions, the arrangement doesn't change, reducing the total number of unique arrangements.
Here, we must divide by 20! (the number of ways to arrange the 20 identical balls) and 2! (the number of ways to arrange the two identical separators):
22!/20!2!= 231.
The correct answer is
C.
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