Permutations
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A _permutation_ of a finite set S is an ordered list of its elements.
An _r-permutation_ of S is an ordered list of r of its elements.
Warning:
there is another, related, meaning of 'permutation': an element of the
group of bijections of S. We won't use that meaning in this course.
P(n,r) := number of r-permutations of a set of size n.
e.g. P(26,5) = number of strings of 5 distinct letters from the Roman alphabet.
By the multiplication principle,
P(n,r) = n * (n-1) * ... * (n-(r-1))
(n choices for first, n-1 for second...)
P(n,r) = n! / (n-r)!
P(n,n) = n!
Remark:
Can interpret "P(n,r) = n! / (n-r)!" as follows:
We can obtain an r-permutation of S by taking the first r elements of
a permutation of S.
Partition the permutations of S according to the r-permutation which
results from this: we see that the elements of each set of the
partition correspond to the permutations of the left-over n-r
elements, so we recover the formula by the division principle.
A _circular r-permutation_ of a set is a way of putting r of its elements
around a circle, with two such considered equal if one can be rotated to the
other.
We can obtain a circular r-permutation from an r-permutation by "joining the
ends into a circle". Each circular r-permutation is obtained from r different
r-permutations, so by the division principle:
number of circular r-permutations of n elements
= P(n,r) / r
= n! / r(n-r)!
Example:
How many different kinds of necklace can be made from 7 spherical beads
of different colours? Consider two necklaces to be of the same kind when
they can be non-destructively manipulated to look the same.
Solution:
There are 7!/7 = 6! circular permutations of the 13 colours. Each kind
of necklace is obtained from exactly *two* circular permutations, because
flipping the necklace in space doesn't change the kind. So
6! / 2 = 360.
Example:
How many ways can 13 people be sat around a round table, if Professor Q
is not to be sat next to his arch-nemesis Inspector P?
Solution:
Without the restriction, there would be 12! seating arrangements.
Consider seating everyone but P; each such arrangement yields two
forbidden arrangements of all 13, one by placing P to Q's right and one by
placing P to Q's left. We count each forbidden arrangement once in this
way.
So the answer is 12! - 2*11! = 10*11! = 399168000
Subsets ("Combinations")
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An _r-subset_, or _r-combination_, of a set S is a subset of size r.
C(n,r) = number of r-subsets of a set of size n.
e.g. C(26,5) = number of unordered selections of 5 letters from the roman
alphabet
Theorem:
C(n,r) = n! / r!(n-r)!
Proof:
The r-permutations of a set are precisely the permutations of the
r-subsets. Each r-subset has r! permutations, so
P(n,r) = r! * C(n,r).
So
C(n,r)
= P(n,r) / r!
= n! / r!(n-r)!.
C(n,r) is also called a "binomial coefficient".
Example:
If we expand out (x+y)^n and collect terms to obtain
a_0 x^n + a_1 x^{n-1}y + ... + a_{n-1} xy^{n-1} + a_n y^n,
what are the coefficients a_k?
Solution:
a_k is the number of ways of choosing y k times when we have to choose
either x or y from each factor of the product
(x+y)(x+y)...(x+y) (n times),
which is the number of subsets of this set of n factors.
So a_k = C(n,i).
Theorem [Pascal's Formula]:
If 0 < k < n,
C(n,k) = C(n-1,k) + C(n-1,k-1)
Proof:
|S| = n.
Fix x \in S; let S' := S \\ {x}.
Partition the k-subsets of S according to whether they contain x.
Those which don't correspond to k-subsets of S',
those which do correspond to (k-1)-subsets of S'.
Theorem:
\Sigma_{k=0}^n C(n,k) = 2^n
Proof:
|S| = n.
\Sigma_{k=0}^n C(n,k) = number of subsets of S.
But to choose a subset of S is to choose for each element of S whether it
should or should not go in to the subset. That's two choices for each of
the n elements, so by the multiplication principle there are
2*2*...*2 = 2^n subsets of S.