Both Permutations/ Combination and Geometry (2 problems)

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[1] A certain businessman wears only three different colors of shirt - white, blue and grey. The probability that he will wear a blue or grey shirt is 2/3. During a four-day work week, what is the probability that the businessman will wear a white shirt at least once?
(A) 16/81
(B) 2/3
(C) 8/27
(D) 65/81
(E) 19/27


[2] A right triangle ABC has to be constructed in the xy-plane so that the right angle is at A and AB is parallel to x-axis. The coordinates of A, B and C are to satisfy the inequalities -3 ≤ x ≤ 5 and 2 ≤ y ≤ 11 and x & y are integers. The number of different triangles that can be constructed with these properties are?
(A) 90
(B) 900
(C) 6480
(D) 8100
(E) 10000


Official answer to [1] [spoiler](D) 65/81[/spoiler]
Official answer to [2] [spoiler](C) 6480 [/spoiler]
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by Rahul@gurome » Sat Sep 18, 2010 2:45 am
Solution to [1]:
The probability that the businessman will wear a white shirt at least once is =1 - (probability that he never wears the white shirt).
Probability that he never wears the white shirt on all four days is same as the probability that he wears blue or grey shirt on all four days = (2/3)^4 = 16/81.
Or required probability is 1-16/81 = 65/81.
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by GMATGuruNY » Sat Sep 18, 2010 3:16 am
euro wrote: [2] A right triangle ABC has to be constructed in the xy-plane so that the right angle is at A and AB is parallel to x-axis. The coordinates of A, B and C are to satisfy the inequalities -3 ≤ x ≤ 5 and 2 ≤ y ≤ 11 and x & y are integers. The number of different triangles that can be constructed with these properties are?
(A) 90
(B) 900
(C) 6480
(D) 8100
(E) 10000

Official answer to [2] [spoiler](C) 6480 [/spoiler]
When a question asks for the number of triangles that can be constructed, it's not a geometry question but a combinations question. Why? Because a triangle is a combination of 3 points.

We need to determine how many ways we can combine A, B and C to form a triangle that satisfies all the requirements of the problem. For each point, we need to choose an x value and a y value.

Point A:
x value: -3≤x≤5, giving us 9 choices.

y value: 2≤y≤11, giving us 10 choices.

Now we have to combine the number of choices for x with the number of choices for y. It's as though we have 9 shirts and 10 ties, and we need to determine how many outfits can be made:

(number of choices for x)*(number of choices for y) = 9*10 = 90 choices for A.

Point C:
x value: In order to construct a right triangle, C has to have the same x coordinate as A (so that C is directly above A and we get a right angle). So we have only 1 choice for x: it must be the same integer that we chose for A's x value.

y value: If A and C share the same x value, they can't have the same y value, or they will be the same point. We used 1 of our 10 choices for y when we chose A, so we have 10-1 = 9 choices for B's y value.

(number of choices for x)*(number of choices for y) = 1*9 = 9 choices for C.

Point B:
y value: For AB to be parallel to the x axis, A and B have to share the same y value. So the number of choices for y is 1; it must be the same integer that we chose for A's y value.

x value: If A and B share the same y value, they can't have the same x value, or they will be the same point. We used 1 of our 9 choices for x when we chose A, so we have 9-1 = 8 choices for B's x value.

(number of choices for x)*(number of choices for y)= 8*1 = 8 choices for B.

So we have 90 choices for A, 9 choices for B, and 8 choices for B. We need to determine how many ways we can combine A, B and C to make a triangle. It's as though we have 90 shirts, 9 ties, and 8 pairs of pants, and we need to determine the number of outfits that can be made:

(number of choices for A)*(number of choices for B)*(number of choices for C) = 90*9*8 = 6480.

The correct answer is C.
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