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To count k-element variations of n objects, we first need to choose a k-element combination and then a permutation of the selected objects.
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Permutations are arrangements of objects (with or without repetition), order does matter.
The number of permutations of n objects, without repetition, is
Pn = P (^) nn = n!.
The counting problem is the same as putting n distinct balls into n distinct boxes, or to count bijections from a set of n distinct elements to a set of n distinct elements.
A permutation with repetition is an arrangement of objects, where some objects are repeated a prescribed number of times. The number of permutations with repetitions of k 1 copies of 1 , k 2 copies of 2 ,... , kr copies of r is
Pk 1 ,...,kr =
(k (^1) ∏+ · · · + kr)! r i=1 ki! The counting problem is the same as putting k 1 + · · · + kr distinct balls into r distinct boxes such that box number i receives ki balls. In other words we count onto functions from a set of k 1 + · · · + kr distinct elements onto the set { 1 , 2 ,... , r}, such that the preimage of the element i has size ki.
Combinations are selections of objects, with or without repetition, order does not matter.
The number of k-element combinations of n objects, without repetition is
Cn,k =
n k
n! k!(n − k)!
The counting problem is the same as the number of ways of putting k identical balls into n distinct boxes, such that each box receives at most one ball. It is also the number of one-to-one functions from a set of k identical elements into a set of n distinct elements. It is also the number of k-element subsets of an n-element set.
The number of k-element combinations of n objects, with repetition is
Cn,k = Cn+k− 1 ,k =
n + k − 1 k
n k
It is also the number of all ways to put k identical balls into n distinct boxes, or the number of all functions from a set of k identical elements to a set of n distinct elements.
Variations are arrangements of selections of objects, where the order of the selected objects matters. To count k-element variations of n objects, we first need to choose a k-element combination and then a permutation of the selected objects.
Thus the number of k-element variations of n elements with repetition not allowed is
Vn,k = Pn,k =
n k
· k! = (n)k.
It is also the number of ways of putting k distinct balls into n distinct boxes such that each box receives at most one element. It is also the number of one-to-one functions from a set of k distinct elements into a set of n distinct elements.
The number of k-element variations of n-elements with repetition allowed, is
Vn,k = nk.
It is the number of all ways of putting k distinct balls into n distinct boxes. It is also the number of all functions from a set of k distinct elements into a set of n distinct elements.