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In how many ways can you select three integers x1, x2 & x3 from 1 to 12 such that x1<x2<x3. (Hint: Two ways to solve this. One lengthy...uhh and one very shorte... ahh)
-Vicks
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Hi there,
This topic has been closed and archived due to inactivity or violation of community quality standards. No more replies are possible here.
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right javs...
12C3 is the number of ways to select three numbers, and there is only one
way to arrange these numbers such that x1<x2<x3 i hope u got it praet...
-Vikcs
right javs... 12C3 is the number of ways to select three numbers, and there is only one way to arrange these numbers such that x1<x2<x3 i hope u got it praet... -Vikcs
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Clever way of phrasing the problem..same as the # of ways to pick 3 #'s from 1-12..
if order does matter than why are we using a combination formula?
shouldn't we use the permutation formula?
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If order matters ,we use permutations..
Permutations say the every position is unique..so 123 is different from 321...
But in our case...we dont need the positions to be unique..
hth
praetorian
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In how many ways can you select three integers x1, x2 & x3 from 1 to 12 such that x1<x2<x3
--== Message from the GMAT Club Team ==--
THERE IS LIKELY A BETTER DISCUSSION OF THIS EXACT QUESTION. This discussion does not meet community quality standards. It has been retired.
If you would like to discuss this question please re-post it in the respective forum. Thank you!
To review the GMAT Club's Forums Posting Guidelines, please follow these links: Quantitative | Verbal Please note - we may remove posts that do not follow our posting guidelines. Thank you.
no answer choice in the original post, this one is just a very simple answer to a trickily worded question You'll be blown away to know the answer... I already said too much.
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