V VictorTango-9W New Member Joined Jun 28, 2022 Messages 23 Gender Male HSC 2022 Jul 21, 2022 #1 ^^^ Thanks
V VictorTango-9W New Member Joined Jun 28, 2022 Messages 23 Gender Male HSC 2022 Jul 21, 2022 #2 VictorTango-9W said: ^^^ Thanks Click to expand... And what happens if we find K which is not an integer
VictorTango-9W said: ^^^ Thanks Click to expand... And what happens if we find K which is not an integer
C cossine Well-Known Member Joined Jul 24, 2020 Messages 627 Gender Male HSC 2017 Jul 21, 2022 #3 VictorTango-9W said: ^^^ Thanks Click to expand... Yes k needs to be integer. nCk is just the number of permutations in binomial theorem. Let say you want find the number permutation of XXXYY. That is just 5C3 if you choose 3 X's or equivalently 5C2 if you choose 2 Y's. As an exercise take a look at multinomial distribution
VictorTango-9W said: ^^^ Thanks Click to expand... Yes k needs to be integer. nCk is just the number of permutations in binomial theorem. Let say you want find the number permutation of XXXYY. That is just 5C3 if you choose 3 X's or equivalently 5C2 if you choose 2 Y's. As an exercise take a look at multinomial distribution
V VictorTango-9W New Member Joined Jun 28, 2022 Messages 23 Gender Male HSC 2022 Jul 21, 2022 #4 cossine said: Yes k needs to be integer. nCk is just the number of permutations in binomial theorem. Let say you want find the number permutation of XXXYY. That is just 5C3 if you choose 3 X's or equivalently 5C2 if you choose 2 Y's. As an exercise take a look at multinomial distribution Click to expand... Aye makes sense thanks bro
cossine said: Yes k needs to be integer. nCk is just the number of permutations in binomial theorem. Let say you want find the number permutation of XXXYY. That is just 5C3 if you choose 3 X's or equivalently 5C2 if you choose 2 Y's. As an exercise take a look at multinomial distribution Click to expand... Aye makes sense thanks bro