souvik101990
Six marbles (two red, two blue, and two green) are arranged in two rows of three such that no single row or column has two marbles of the same color. How many different arrangements are possible?
a. 12
b. 48
c. 96
d. 128
e. 192
There could be two approaches primarily- 1) Using combinatorics- there are 3 colors,two balls/color-
RED=2,
Blue=2 and
Green=2Now, there could be 2 options of choosing where to place the first ball i.e Row1 or Row2=2C1
There would be 3 options of choosing the first color- i.e. R,B,G=3C1
if we have chosen the 1st color, 2nd and 3rd color has to be different i.e. let's say if we chose Red, We would have only B and green to be selected=2C1(1 out of 2) and 1C1 subsequently
Hence total number of ways=2C1*3C1*2C1*1C1=12
2) There could be 3! possibilities of arranging a Red, a green and 1 Blue ball
RBG,RGB,BGR,BRG,GRB and GBR.
Now if we select any one of the 6 given combinations for row 1, we would only be able to select 1 out of 2 remaining combinations for Row 2( i.e for RGB in Row 1, we can select BRG and GBR only=> remaining combinations would have atleast one of the three colors in same position in column e.g. if we select GRB, Blue color will be same in 1st and 2nd row- not allowed )= 6*2=12 or 2 options for RGB OR 2Option for RBG etc.....2+2-----6 times=12
Please give kudos if it makes sense