What is a permutation calculation calculating?
1 Answer
it's a calculation that shows the number of ways a group can be picked if we care what the order of those picks is (like the way election results for student government can go).
Explanation:
Let's say we have a student government and there are 4 seats to be filled - the President, the Vice President, the Treasurer, and the Secretary. Let's also say there are 4 people running for those seats. How many different ways are there for those 4 people to hold those 4 positions?
We can look at see that for the President's seat, there are 4 candidates.
We can then look at the VP's seat and see that, with someone in the role of President, there are now 3 people left who can be VP.
Then we look to the Treasurer and see there are 2 people left.
And lastly there is the Secretary and the remaining person goes there.
Therefore there are:
This is an example of a factoral problem - we're going to take a population and take all the members of that population and place them (whether it's political office or movie seats or whatever - we're using the entire population).
What happens if we have more population than we have seats or places? For example, there are 6 people who are vying for those 4 government slots?
We could do it this way:
We can look at see that for the President's seat, there are 6 candidates.
We can then look at the VP's seat and see that, with someone in the role of President, there are now 5 people left who can be VP.
Then we look to the Treasurer and see there are 4 people left.
And lastly there is the Secretary and there are 3 remaining people who could go there.
So we get
Notice that in the "6 people, 4 offices" example, we ended up with this calculation:
How can we put that in terms of factorials? Well, if we multiply it by
And keep in mind that the definition of a factorial is that we multiply by each natural number up to and including the one with the sign (so
And now see that the number 6 is the number of our population while 2 is the difference between the population and the number of seats that needed to be filled,
And that is exactly what the permutation formula is! If I call
Lastly, I want to show that this formula still works if we have that initial example - 4 people running for 4 seats - we should get