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If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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AbeinOhio wrote:
I'm pretty lost on this one..

Here was the logic that i thought would work but obviously I am missing something:

5 couples = 10 people

So first position there are 10 options

Second position, the first person's mate is excluded now so instead of having 9 options you have 8 options

3rd position the first and 2nd person's mates are both excluded now so instead of having 7 options you have 6 options

so I got 10 * 9 * 8 = 480

What am I missing?


You have to select a committee of 3 people. It means A, B, C form the same committee as B, C, A i.e. you don't have to arrange people. But when you say 'first person' can be selected in 10 ways, you are arranging the 3 people in first, second and third spots. So according to you, A, B, C and B, C, A are different committees.
So all you need to do in un-arrange. To arrange 3 people, you multiply by 3!
To un-arrange, you will divide by 3!
480/3! = 80

There's your answer.

Originally posted by KarishmaB on 29 Feb 2012, 11:24.
Last edited by KarishmaB on 11 Oct 2022, 01:04, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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ANS -80..
total people=10.. ways to select 3 out of them=10c3=120...
it includes comb including couple..
ways in which couple are included =8c1*5=40..
so ans reqd 120-40=80...
(if we take a gp to include a couple ,it will include couple +any one of rest 8 so 8c1 ways ..
5 couple so 5*8c1=40)
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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kirankp wrote:
If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married couples so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other, how many such committees are possible?
A. 20
B. 40
C. 50
D. 80
E. 120


total no for selecting 3 out of 10=10c3=120

no. of ways in which no two married people included= tot- 2 married couple included
2 married couple can be included in 5c1( no. of ways selecting a couple) * 8c1( no. of ways selecting the third person)=5 * 8=40

reqd comb=120-40=80
hence D
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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I like to think of it like this:

Step 1 - find the combinations without any restrictions

10C3 = 120

Step 2 - subtract the combinations that would have a couple in the committee

5C1 x 4C1 x 2 = 40

In this step, we first find the # of ways to choose a couple, which is 5C1=5.
After getting the first couple, we need 1 more member, so we choose 1 couple of the remainin 4 couples, which is 4C1 = 4. But within this new couple, we can either choose the man or the woman, so we need to x2.

Step 3 - find answer (no restrictions minus restrictions)

120 - 40 = 80

So the answer is 80.
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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I too got 80 with the conventional way of 10C3 - 5C1 * 8C1 = 120 - 40 = 80.
But learnt and loved Bunuel's way. Thanks!
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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"If a committee of 3 people is to be selected"
Combo box arrangement
(_)(_)(_)/3!

"from among 5 married couples"
Bag of 10 choices: A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H,I,J

"so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other"
First slot has 10 choices
(10)(_)(_)/3!

but the choice eliminates the spouse. The second slot has 8 choices
(10)(8)(_)/3!

but the choice eliminates another spouse. The third slot has 6 choices
(10)(8)(6)/3!

"how many such committees are possible?"
(10)(8)(6)/(3*2) = 80
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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5C3 --> ways 3 couples can be selected out of 5 couples = 10
(2C1)^3 --> ways to select 1 adult from each couple, for each of the three couples. = 8
Total Possibilities = 5C3 * (2C1)^3 = 80
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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I'm pretty lost on this one..

Here was the logic that i thought would work but obviously I am missing something:

5 couples = 10 people

So first position there are 10 options

Second position, the first person's mate is excluded now so instead of having 9 options you have 8 options

3rd position the first and 2nd person's mates are both excluded now so instead of having 7 options you have 6 options

so I got 10 * 9 * 8 = 480

What am I missing?
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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AbeinOhio wrote:
I'm pretty lost on this one..

Here was the logic that i thought would work but obviously I am missing something:

5 couples = 10 people

So first position there are 10 options

Second position, the first person's mate is excluded now so instead of having 9 options you have 8 options

3rd position the first and 2nd person's mates are both excluded now so instead of having 7 options you have 6 options

so I got 10 * 9 * 8 = 480

What am I missing?


You've done everything right, just missed the last step: since the people in the group needn't be ordered (arranged) in it, then you should divide 10*8*6=480 by 3! to get rid of duplication and get un-ordered groups --> 480/3!=80.

Hope it's clear.
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
Bunuel wrote:
kwhitejr wrote:
Can anyone demonstrate the following?

If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married couples so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other, how many such committees are possible?

A. 20
B. 40
C. 50
D. 80
E. 120


Each couple can send only one "representative" to the committee. Let's see in how many ways we can choose 3 couples (as there should be 3 members) to send only one "representatives" to the committee: 5C3=10.

But these 3 chosen couples can send two persons (either husband or wife): 2*2*2=2^3=8.

Total # of ways: 5C3*2^3=80.

Answer: D.

Similar problems:
ps-combinations-94068.html
ps-combinations-101784.html
committee-of-88772.html
if-4-people-are-selected-from-a-group-of-6-married-couples-99055.html
if-there-are-four-distinct-pairs-of-brothers-and-sisters-99992.html

Hope it's clear.



How it could be two person, out of three couples they have to sent 3 rep rite.. I am totally confused kindly enlighten me
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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breakit wrote:
Bunuel wrote:
kwhitejr wrote:
Can anyone demonstrate the following?

If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married couples so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other, how many such committees are possible?

A. 20
B. 40
C. 50
D. 80
E. 120


Each couple can send only one "representative" to the committee. Let's see in how many ways we can choose 3 couples (as there should be 3 members) to send only one "representatives" to the committee: 5C3=10.

But these 3 chosen couples can send two persons (either husband or wife): 2*2*2=2^3=8.

Total # of ways: 5C3*2^3=80.

Answer: D.

Similar problems:
ps-combinations-94068.html
ps-combinations-101784.html
committee-of-88772.html
if-4-people-are-selected-from-a-group-of-6-married-couples-99055.html
if-there-are-four-distinct-pairs-of-brothers-and-sisters-99992.html

Hope it's clear.



How it could be two person, out of three couples they have to sent 3 rep rite.. I am totally confused kindly enlighten me


Yes, 3 couples should send total of 3 representatives, but EACH couple has 2 options (either husband or wife), thus these 3 couples can send 3 persons in 2^3=8 ways.

Hope it's clear.
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kwhitejr wrote:
If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married couples so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other, how many such committees are possible?

A. 20
B. 40
C. 50
D. 80
E. 120


I always use the ANAGRAM technique.

How many ways can we select three persons from 5 couples? Since we can only get one representative from each couple selected, we can imagine the 5 couples as 5 persons.

5!/3!2! = 10

Now, we know that there are 10 ways to select three persons of representing couples. But whenever we make selections, there are two ways to select from the couple, either wife or husband. Thus, 2 x 2 x 2 = 8

8*10 = 80

Answer: C
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If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married couples so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other, how many such committees are possible?

(1) Combinatorial approach:

\(C^5_3*(C^2_1)^3 =\frac{5*4*3}{3*2}* 2^3 = 10*8 = 80\)

(2) Reversal combinatorial approach:

Total number of groups: \(C^10_3 = 120\)
Total number of groups with married people: \(C^5_1 * C^4_1 * C^2_1 = 5*4*2 = 40\)

120 - 40 = 80
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Maxirosario2012 wrote:
If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married couples so that the committee does not include two people who are married to each other, how many such committees are possible?

(1) Combinatorial approach:

\(C^5_3*(C^2_1)^3 =\frac{5*4*3}{3*2}* 2^3 = 10*8 = 80\)


i.e., IF AB, CD, EF, GH, IJ are the couples you have to select only one from a group

1. So selecting one from a group of 2 can be done in \(2C1\)ways. i.e., in 2 ways You have to select 3 people that way. So the total number of possibilities is \(2*2*2 = 8\)

2. Each group of 2 itself has to be selected from 5 such groups. You are selecting 3 groups of 2 from 5 such groups. therefore the total number of possibilities for this is \(5C3= 10\).

3. \((1) * (2) = 8* 10 = 80.\)
Quote:
(2) Reversal combinatorial approach:

Total number of groups: \(C^10_3 = 120\)
Total number of groups with married people: \(C^5_1 * C^4_1 * C^2_1 = 5*4*2 = 40\)

120 - 40 = 80


1. Total number of possibilities of selecting 3 people out of 10 people\(= 10C3= 120\)
2. For total number of groups with a married couple the situation is you have (i)2 people who are married to each other i.e., a group of 2 married to each other and (ii) one other person. The number of possibilities of (i) is the number of ways one group of married people can be selected from 5 groups of married people which is \(5C1 = 5\)ways, the number of possibilities of (ii) can be arrived by finding out in how many ways the remaining person can be selected. It can be done in \(8C1=8\) ways because if you remove the selected married couple 8 persons will remain.
3. Total number of ways of having a married couple\(in the group of 3 = 5*8=40\)4. So number of groups in which 2 people are not married couple \(= 120-40=80.\)
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
AbeinOhio wrote:
I'm pretty lost on this one..

Here was the logic that i thought would work but obviously I am missing something:

5 couples = 10 people

So first position there are 10 options

Second position, the first person's mate is excluded now so instead of having 9 options you have 8 options

3rd position the first and 2nd person's mates are both excluded now so instead of having 7 options you have 6 options

so I got 10 * 9 * 8 = 480

What am I missing?


What if you started out by choosing the first person in 1 one way instead of 10.

So you pick a person of the 10, doesn't matter who. For the next slot you have 8 choices. and the next 6. so (1)(8)(6). Why isn't this approach valid?
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
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alphabeta1234 wrote:
AbeinOhio wrote:
I'm pretty lost on this one..

Here was the logic that i thought would work but obviously I am missing something:

5 couples = 10 people

So first position there are 10 options

Second position, the first person's mate is excluded now so instead of having 9 options you have 8 options

3rd position the first and 2nd person's mates are both excluded now so instead of having 7 options you have 6 options

so I got 10 * 9 * 8 = 480

What am I missing?


What if you started out by choosing the first person in 1 one way instead of 10.

So you pick a person of the 10, doesn't matter who. For the next slot you have 8 choices. and the next 6. so (1)(8)(6). Why isn't this approach valid?


Why do you have 1 choice and not 10?
Why do you have 8 choices for the second pick and not 9?
Why do you have 6 choices for the third pick and not 8?

The reason why AbeinOhio's solution is not correct is explained here: if-a-committee-of-3-people-is-to-be-selected-from-among-98533.html#p1051830

Hope it helps.
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Re: If a committee of 3 people is to be selected from among 5 married coup [#permalink]
Can someone please help me? I don't know what I am doing wrong.

5C1*2C1* 4C1*2C1* 8C1=640, being:

5C1*2C1 - ways of choosing one couple out of 5, multiplied by 2C1 ways of choosing one person of a couple
4C1*2C1 - ways of choosing another couple out of 4, multiplied by 2C1 ways of choosing one person of a couple
8C1 - people that can occupy the third spot
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