• Congratulations to the Class of 2024 on your results!
    Let us know how you went here
    Got a question about your uni preferences? Ask us here

Circular Combinatorics Question help! (1 Viewer)

Epicman69

Active Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2020
Messages
213
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
How do you arrange something in a circular bracelet with 8 beads where 3 of the beads are the same colour?
 

idkkdi

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2019
Messages
2,575
Gender
Male
HSC
2021
How do you arrange something in a circular bracelet with 8 beads where 3 of the beads are the same colour?
nvm i think I understood it wrong lol
 
Last edited:

ExtremelyBoredUser

Bored Uni Student
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Messages
2,479
Location
m
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
Would it be 60 since you could flip the bracelet since its considered a bead property? I'm not entirely sure but I remember stumbling across beads type questions and you would solve them normally as a circle arrangement question and then divide it by 2.

5!/2 = 120/2 = 60

The three beads are the same color so you couldn't arrange them inside the group and arranging other beads you would get 5! and then divide by 2? I'm probably wrong but these questions confuse me a bit as well.

I really wish I could show a diagram, I'll try to draw my point of view if I can.

1630494752769.png
 
Last edited:

ExtremelyBoredUser

Bored Uni Student
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Messages
2,479
Location
m
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
nvm I just got the answer its 7!/3!
oh nvm I guess this question was considered a normal circle arrangements problem. 7! for normal arrangement in a circle and you divide it by 3! because there's 3 identical beads, just like how you would do with arrangements with more than 1 same letter.
 

Epicman69

Active Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2020
Messages
213
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
What did you do?
It's just like putting 8 beads into a circle right? So you get 7! but you need to divide by 3! since there are 3 beads of the same colour and as such there is 3! repetitions of the same pattern, note that the question never mentioned that you need the beads to be together.
 

ExtremelyBoredUser

Bored Uni Student
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Messages
2,479
Location
m
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
idk but that was the right answer so...
Yeah this is what annoys me about the topic, you do a truckload of questions with that style and you use one strategy to do them and you get them right, but then they throw another question but suddenly it has different properties.

Like I swear questions with beads you have to divide by two because they produce same arrangements when you "flip it" or so I've been taught that way, but in this one you just do it like a regular question which would ask you to arrange, for say MATHEMATICS, in a circle and you would do (n-1)!/2!2!2! etc.
 

Epicman69

Active Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2020
Messages
213
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
Yeah this is what annoys me about the topic, you do a truckload of questions with that style and you use one strategy to do them and you get them right, but then they throw another question but suddenly it has different properties.

Like I swear questions with beads you have to divide by two because they produce same arrangements when you "flip it" or so I've been taught that way, but in this one you just do it like a regular question which would ask you to arrange, for say MATHEMATICS, in a circle and you would do n!/2!2!2! etc.
yea ikr, I hate how you can't really check if you got it right.
 

ExtremelyBoredUser

Bored Uni Student
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Messages
2,479
Location
m
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
yea ikr, I hate how you can't really check if you got it right.
I guess you just have to go with what methods your teacher taught you for the topic because its most likely the correct one for examination purposes. Really annoys me when there's two contradicting methods from different textbooks or sources which produce different answers; at least with other topics there's only a clear cut answer such as polynomials or trig, you either screwed up in your working out or you just flat out don't know how to do it. I don't hate this topic but when it pulls shit like this...
 

idkkdi

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 2, 2019
Messages
2,575
Gender
Male
HSC
2021
since they didn't mention anything about them I presumed that you assume the other beads are different
if the answer was 7C3, the other 5 are also the same colour.

Now for @ExtremelyBoredUser's point about flipping. I'm pretty sure that is meant to be accounted for and that the book forgot or smth.

Answer should be 8C3 /(8*2)
8 for rotation.
2 for flipping.
 

ExtremelyBoredUser

Bored Uni Student
Joined
Jan 11, 2021
Messages
2,479
Location
m
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
I believe the book just considered beads as a placeholder like people, objects, letters instead of considering the effects of properties so the answer was 7!/3! as a result since they were probably considering it a circle arrangement.

If the beads property was considered, then the answer would've been what @Life'sHard did.

And here's additional context to the whole flipping thing I'm talking about;

1630501096371.png
Source:

I didn't learn it off here but it explains the "flipping" thing I'm referring to. The beads questions in the cambridge textbook used this same process and so did other test papers/sources of questions, so I assumed the same here; the question really didn't give any indicators to assume or not to assume so 🤷‍♀️
 

Epicman69

Active Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2020
Messages
213
Gender
Male
HSC
2022
I believe the book just considered beads as a placeholder like people, objects, letters instead of considering the effects of properties so the answer was 7!/3! as a result since they were probably considering it a circle arrangement.

If the beads property was considered, then the answer would've been what @Life'sHard did.

And here's additional context to the whole flipping thing I'm talking about;

View attachment 31896
Source:

I didn't learn it off here but it explains the "flipping" thing I'm referring to. The beads questions in the cambridge textbook used this same process and so did other test papers/sources of questions, so I assumed the same here; the question really didn't give any indicators to assume or not to assume so 🤷‍♀️
I think I should go with this since this is probably the correct way to do the question anyways cause it considers more variables i.e flipping the bracelet.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top