Last visit was: 25 Apr 2024, 07:16 It is currently 25 Apr 2024, 07:16

Close
GMAT Club Daily Prep
Thank you for using the timer - this advanced tool can estimate your performance and suggest more practice questions. We have subscribed you to Daily Prep Questions via email.

Customized
for You

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History

Track
Your Progress

every week, we’ll send you an estimated GMAT score based on your performance

Practice
Pays

we will pick new questions that match your level based on your Timer History
Not interested in getting valuable practice questions and articles delivered to your email? No problem, unsubscribe here.
Close
Request Expert Reply
Confirm Cancel
SORT BY:
Date
Tags:
Show Tags
Hide Tags
User avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 20 Oct 2010
Posts: 10
Own Kudos [?]: 294 [179]
Given Kudos: 0
Send PM
Most Helpful Reply
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Posts: 92913
Own Kudos [?]: 618949 [96]
Given Kudos: 81595
Send PM
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 02 Apr 2012
Posts: 51
Own Kudos [?]: 160 [49]
Given Kudos: 155
Location: United States (VA)
Concentration: Entrepreneurship, Finance
GMAT 1: 680 Q49 V34
WE:Consulting (Consulting)
Send PM
General Discussion
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 14 Apr 2012
Posts: 1
Own Kudos [?]: 4 [4]
Given Kudos: 0
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
3
Kudos
1
Bookmarks
What seems to work as well, though its tougher to come up with this solution:

(10*9*8) * 2/3 + (10*9*4)*1/3 = 600. Divided by all possible permutations (=3!) yields 100.

Explanation: For the first spot you have 10 possible canditates, for the 2nd 9. For the 3rd spot you need to differentiate if a senior partner has been picked for one of the first 2 spots or not. If yes, then you can pick one of the 8 remaining guys, so 10*9*8. If no senior partner has been picked yet, you need 10*9*4.
Now you need to weight the 2 cases with the corresponding probabilities: probability of no senior partner being picked in the first 2 draws = 6/10*5/9=1/3, so you weight 10*9*4 with 1/3. For the complementary case (senior partner was picked in the first 2 draws) you just take the complementary prob (1-1/3)= 2/3 and weight 10*9*8 with it.
Now you just need to divide the answer (600) by the number of different positions (=3!) and get 600/6=100

But I suggest you stick with the easy solution in the GMAT :)
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 04 Mar 2013
Posts: 50
Own Kudos [?]: 80 [9]
Given Kudos: 27
Location: India
Concentration: Strategy, Operations
Schools: Booth '17 (M)
GMAT 1: 770 Q50 V44
GPA: 3.66
WE:Operations (Manufacturing)
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
8
Kudos
1
Bookmarks
The standard approach

1 senior partner
4 x 6C2 = 60

2 senior partners
4C2 x 6 = 36

3 senior partners
4C3 = 4

Total 100
However GDKs approach is a better way around
Director
Director
Joined: 17 Dec 2012
Posts: 589
Own Kudos [?]: 1519 [3]
Given Kudos: 20
Location: India
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
1
Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
gdk800 wrote:
A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)

A. 48
B. 100
C. 120
D. 288
E. 600


A general approach to solving Combination problems

Steps:

1. There are two larger groups, the senior partners and the junior partners.
2. The first larger group i.e., the senior partners is 4 in number. So let\(n1\) be 4. The second larger group, ie, the junior partners is 6 in number. So \(n2\) is 6.
3. The smaller group that is selected from the larger group of senior partners may be 1, 2, or 3 in number. So \(r1\) is 1 or 2 or 3 . Correspondingly the other smaller group i.e.,\(r2\) selected from the junior partners is 2 or 1 or 0 in number.
4. For each value of\(r1\) and the corresponding\(r2\), compute the number of combinations which are\(4C1 * 6C2\), \(4C2 * 6C1\) and\(4C3 * 6C0\) being 60, 36 and 4 ways respectively.
5. The total number of combinations is therefore 60+36+4 = 100
User avatar
Manager
Manager
Joined: 04 Oct 2013
Posts: 141
Own Kudos [?]: 584 [2]
Given Kudos: 29
Concentration: Finance, Leadership
GMAT 1: 590 Q40 V30
GMAT 2: 730 Q49 V40
WE:Project Management (Entertainment and Sports)
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
2
Kudos
You can also think about it as a code.

4S - 6J

three different ways to group them:

S J J. 4(6)5/2! because we have two junior members
or
S S J. 4(3)6/2! because we have two senior members
or
S S S 4(3)2/3! because we have three senior members.

add up the results and you get 100.

Originally posted by gmat6nplus1 on 28 Dec 2014, 08:49.
Last edited by gmat6nplus1 on 28 Dec 2014, 10:38, edited 1 time in total.
GMAT Club Legend
GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Dec 2014
Status:GMAT Assassin/Co-Founder
Affiliations: EMPOWERgmat
Posts: 21846
Own Kudos [?]: 11665 [5]
Given Kudos: 450
Location: United States (CA)
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V49
GRE 1: Q170 V170
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
5
Kudos
Expert Reply
Hi All,

This is a rare layered Combinatorics question. To answer it, you can either figure out the Total of ALL possibilities and subject the ones that "don't fit" or you can perform 3 separate calculations to account for the ones that "do fit." Here is how you can approach the latter option:

We're given 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. We're asked for the number of different groups of 3 (the clue that we'll need the Combination Formula) with one stipulation - there must be AT LEAST 1 senior partner. Here are the 3 calculations:

1) 3 senior partners = 4c3 = 4!/[3!1!] = 4 different groups

2) 2 seniors and 1 junior = (4c2)(6c1) = (4!/[2!2!])(6!/[1!5!) = (6)(6) = 36 different groups

3) 1 senior and 2 juniors = (4c1)(6c2) = (4!/[3!1!])(6!/[2!4!]) = (4)(15) = 60 different groups

4 + 36 + 60 = 100 different groups

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
avatar
Intern
Intern
Joined: 09 Oct 2016
Posts: 5
Own Kudos [?]: 7 [6]
Given Kudos: 0
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
5
Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Hi,

Can some one help me understand what is wrong with my logic here?

A group should have 3 partners with at least 1 senior partner.
Overall there are 4 senior partners & 6 junior partners.

At least 1 senior partner = 4C1
Remaining 2 can be anyone from the remaining partners = (10-1)C2

4C1*9C2 = 144?

Can some one help me understand what i am missing here?
GMAT Club Legend
GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Dec 2014
Status:GMAT Assassin/Co-Founder
Affiliations: EMPOWERgmat
Posts: 21846
Own Kudos [?]: 11665 [8]
Given Kudos: 450
Location: United States (CA)
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V49
GRE 1: Q170 V170
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
7
Kudos
1
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
Hi ashwinchivukula,

Unfortunately, your math includes some 'duplicate entries.'

For example, let's call the 4 senior partners A, B, C and D and the 6 junior partners 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6.

In your calculation, you state that the first person selected MUST be one of those 4 seniors (A/B/C/D) and the remaining two people can be any two of the remaining 9...

The group "A/B/1" and "B/A/1" are the SAME group, but your calculation counts THAT group TWICE (depending on whether A or B was chosen first). In a Combination question, you can't allow duplicate entries.

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
Manager
Manager
Joined: 13 Sep 2015
Status:In the realms of Chaos & Night
Posts: 125
Own Kudos [?]: 624 [1]
Given Kudos: 98
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Bunuel wrote:
gdk800 wrote:
1) A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)
a. 48
b. 100
c. 120
d. 288
e. 600

OA is B.


Total # of different groups of 3 out of 10 people: \(C^3_{10}=120\);
# of groups with only junior partners (so with zero senior memeber): \(C^3_6=20\);

So the # of groups with at least one senior partner is {all} - {none}= {at least one} = 120-20 = 100.

Answer: B.


Hi Bunuel

The question says - "How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed "
So we can calculate as:

Case - I
One group of 3Sp + 1Jp + second group of 1Sp + 2Jp

Case - II
One Group of 2Sp + 2Jp + Second group of 2Sp + 2Jp

Case -III
One Group of 2Sp + 2Jp + Second group of 1Sp + 2Jp + Third Group of 1Sp + 2Jp

Case - IV
One Group of 1Sp + 2Jp + Second group of 1Sp + 2Jp + Third Group of 1Sp + 2Jp

As per the ans - Its how many way a group of 3 Partners can be formed.
Or I seem to misinterpret the prompt.
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Posts: 92913
Own Kudos [?]: 618949 [1]
Given Kudos: 81595
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Expert Reply
Nightfury14 wrote:
Bunuel wrote:
gdk800 wrote:
1) A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)
a. 48
b. 100
c. 120
d. 288
e. 600

OA is B.


Total # of different groups of 3 out of 10 people: \(C^3_{10}=120\);
# of groups with only junior partners (so with zero senior memeber): \(C^3_6=20\);

So the # of groups with at least one senior partner is {all} - {none}= {at least one} = 120-20 = 100.

Answer: B.


Hi Bunuel

The question says - "How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed "
So we can calculate as:

Case - I
One group of 3Sp + 1Jp + second group of 1Sp + 2Jp

Case - II
One Group of 2Sp + 2Jp + Second group of 2Sp + 2Jp

Case -III
One Group of 2Sp + 2Jp + Second group of 1Sp + 2Jp + Third Group of 1Sp + 2Jp

Case - IV
One Group of 1Sp + 2Jp + Second group of 1Sp + 2Jp + Third Group of 1Sp + 2Jp

As per the ans - Its how many way a group of 3 Partners can be formed.
Or I seem to misinterpret the prompt.


The group must have 3 partners in it out of which at least one member is a senior partner:
3SP
2SP + 1JP
1SP + 2JP.
Target Test Prep Representative
Joined: 14 Oct 2015
Status:Founder & CEO
Affiliations: Target Test Prep
Posts: 18758
Own Kudos [?]: 22051 [8]
Given Kudos: 283
Location: United States (CA)
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
6
Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
gdk800 wrote:
A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)

A. 48
B. 100
C. 120
D. 288
E. 600


We are asked to find the number of groups with at least one senior partner.

“At least 1” means "one or more," so the group must have 1 or 2 or 3 senior partners.

Case 1: Exactly 1 senior partner

Recall that the group must have 3 partners. Therefore, in this case, we need to pick 1 senior partner from 4 senior partners and 2 junior partners from 6 junior partners. The number of ways this can be done is 4C1 x 6C2.

4C1 x 6C2 = 4 x (6x5)/2! = 4 x 15 = 60

Case 2: Exactly 2 senior partners

In this case, we need to pick 2 senior partners from 4 senior partners and 1 junior partner from 6 junior partners. The number of ways this can be done is 4C2 x 6C1.

4C2 x 6C1 = (4x3)/2! x 6 = 6 x 6 = 36

Case 3: Exactly 3 senior partners

In this case, we need to pick 3 senior partners from 4 senior partners and no junior partners from 6 junior partners. The number of ways this can be done is 4C3 x 6C0.

4C3 x 6C0 = (4x3x2)/3! x 1 = 4 x 1 = 4

Thus, the total number of ways to form a group in which there is at least 1 senior partner = 60 + 36 + 4 = 100.

Alternate Solution:

It must be true that:

The total number of ways to form a group of 3 partners = (The number of ways in which the group would have at least 1 senior partner) + (The number of ways in which the group would have no senior partners).

Therefore:

The number of ways in which the group would have at least 1 senior partner = (The total number of ways to form a group of 3 partners) - (The number of ways in which the group would have no senior partners).

If the group of 3 has all junior partners, and there are 6 junior partners total, then the group of all junior partners can be made in 6C3 ways.

6C3 = (6 x 5 x 4)/3! = 5 x 4 = 20

The total number of groups of 3 that can be formed from 10 partners is 10C3.

10C3 = (10 x 9 x 8)/3! = 5 x 3 x 8 = 120

Thus, the number of ways to form a group of 3 in which there is at least 1 senior partner = 120 - 20 = 100 ways.

Answer: B
Manager
Manager
Joined: 11 Feb 2017
Posts: 161
Own Kudos [?]: 33 [0]
Given Kudos: 206
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
Bunuel wrote:
gdk800 wrote:
1) A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)
a. 48
b. 100
c. 120
d. 288
e. 600

OA is B.


Total # of different groups of 3 out of 10 people: \(C^3_{10}=120\);
# of groups with only junior partners (so with zero senior memeber): \(C^3_6=20\);

So the # of groups with at least one senior partner is {all} - {none}= {at least one} = 120-20 = 100.


Answer: B.




Your explanation says that there can be all 3 senior members also as mentioned AT LEAST 1 senior so there can be 3 at most , FINE

But in the last line (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different), if we consider this , then it means we need atleast one member should be different in a group ,

So 4C1 * 6C2 (1 senior 2 junior) + 4C2 * 6C1 (2 senior and 1 junior) + 4C3 (Why this 4C3? As we need atleast one different member but in this 4C3 we will have all seniors and no junior and this will contradict the last line)

Please help?
Math Expert
Joined: 02 Sep 2009
Posts: 92913
Own Kudos [?]: 618949 [7]
Given Kudos: 81595
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
5
Kudos
2
Bookmarks
Expert Reply
rocko911 wrote:
Bunuel wrote:
gdk800 wrote:
1) A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)
a. 48
b. 100
c. 120
d. 288
e. 600

OA is B.


Total # of different groups of 3 out of 10 people: \(C^3_{10}=120\);
# of groups with only junior partners (so with zero senior memeber): \(C^3_6=20\);

So the # of groups with at least one senior partner is {all} - {none}= {at least one} = 120-20 = 100.


Answer: B.




Your explanation says that there can be all 3 senior members also as mentioned AT LEAST 1 senior so there can be 3 at most , FINE

But in the last line (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different), if we consider this , then it means we need atleast one member should be different in a group ,

So 4C1 * 6C2 (1 senior 2 junior) + 4C2 * 6C1 (2 senior and 1 junior) + 4C3 (Why this 4C3? As we need atleast one different member but in this 4C3 we will have all seniors and no junior and this will contradict the last line)

Please help?


2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different does NOT mean that the group must have members from both seniors and juniors. It means that (ABC) and (ABD) considered different groups because at least one group member is different, while (ABC) and (ACB) are NOT considered different because all members of these groups are the same even the order is different. This part (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different) is added there to hint that the order of the group is not important and only the members of the group are.

Hope it's clear.
Intern
Intern
Joined: 30 Jan 2018
Posts: 1
Own Kudos [?]: 0 [0]
Given Kudos: 6
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
I don't understand why this is not valid:
a) Pick one senior partner from 4
b) Pick 2 x further partners from 9 remaining senior & junior partners

4 (senior partner) * 9 (other partner) * 8 (other partner) = 288

Order of selection does not matter, so divide by # of ways to re-arrange 3 partners i.e. 3! = 6

288 / 6 = 48

But this is the wrong answer. Why?
GMAT Club Legend
GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Dec 2014
Status:GMAT Assassin/Co-Founder
Affiliations: EMPOWERgmat
Posts: 21846
Own Kudos [?]: 11665 [1]
Given Kudos: 450
Location: United States (CA)
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V49
GRE 1: Q170 V170
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Expert Reply
Hi Manychips,

In your calculation, you assume that the first person chosen MUST be a Senior Partner, but then you divide the entire calculation by 3! (which is something that you can only do if the first person can be ANY partner - Senior or Junior). If you want to approach the question in this way, then you would have to do the following:

Total number of PERMUTATIONS (regardless of whether the member is Senior or Junior) = (10)(9)(8) = 720
Total number of UNIQUE groups of three = 720/3! = 120

Total Permutations of three that are ONLY Junior Members = (6)(5)(4) = 120
Total number of UNIQUE groups of Junior Members = 120/3! = 20

Total groups with AT LEAST 1 Senior Member = (Total of All Groups) - (Total of JUST Junior Members) = 120 - 20 = 100

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
Manager
Manager
Joined: 09 Jun 2017
Posts: 86
Own Kudos [?]: 14 [0]
Given Kudos: 27
GMAT 1: 640 Q44 V35
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
Please tell me what I have done wrong :oops:
First , we choose a Senior member :
C(4,1) =4
then we choose 2 members from the rest (9)
C(9,2) =36
so the number of methods is 4*36 = 144

Wrong but why ?
GMAT Club Legend
GMAT Club Legend
Joined: 19 Dec 2014
Status:GMAT Assassin/Co-Founder
Affiliations: EMPOWERgmat
Posts: 21846
Own Kudos [?]: 11665 [1]
Given Kudos: 450
Location: United States (CA)
GMAT 1: 800 Q51 V49
GRE 1: Q170 V170
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
1
Kudos
Expert Reply
Hi foryearss,

Unfortunately, your math includes some 'duplicate entries.'

For example, let's call the 4 senior partners A, B, C and D and the 6 junior partners 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6.

In your calculation, you state that the first person selected MUST be one of those 4 seniors (A/B/C/D) and the remaining two people can be any two of the remaining 9...

The group "A/B/1" and "B/A/1" are the SAME group, but your calculation counts THAT group TWICE (depending on whether A or B was chosen first). In a Combination question, you can't allow duplicate entries.

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
Director
Director
Joined: 24 Oct 2016
Posts: 583
Own Kudos [?]: 1322 [0]
Given Kudos: 143
GMAT 1: 670 Q46 V36
GMAT 2: 690 Q47 V38
GMAT 3: 690 Q48 V37
GMAT 4: 710 Q49 V38 (Online)
Send PM
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
gdk800 wrote:
A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different groups of 3 partners can be formed in which at least one member of the group is a senior partner. (2 groups are considered different if at least one group member is different)

A. 48
B. 100
C. 120
D. 288
E. 600


Bunuel VeritasKarishma I got a doubt regarding an alternate approach. Would really appreciate your help :)

Let Senior Partner = S, Junior Partner = J

Approach: Choose 1 S and then consider the other cases.

Ways of choosing 1 S: 4C1 = 4
Then we have 3 S left

Now the possible cases of picking 2 people from 3S and 6J are: 1) 1S + 1J 2) 0S + 2J 3) 2S + 0J
Total # for those 3 cases = 3C1 * 6C1 + 6C2 + 3C2 = 3*6 + 15 + 3 = 36

Total cases = 4 * 36 = 144

What am I doing wrong since the answer doesn't match the OA? Thanks!
GMAT Club Bot
Re: A firm has 4 senior partners and 6 junior partners. How many different [#permalink]
 1   2   
Moderators:
Math Expert
92912 posts
Senior Moderator - Masters Forum
3137 posts

Powered by phpBB © phpBB Group | Emoji artwork provided by EmojiOne