Permutations and combinations are ways to count how many different groups or orders we can make from a set of items.
Imagine you have 3 toy cars: a red one, a blue one, and a green one. You want to line them up on your bedroom floor.
If the order matters, like when you're racing them, that’s a permutation. For example, red first, then blue, then green is different from green first, then blue, then red. So, you can make 6 different lines with these 3 cars because every swap changes the race!
Now, if the order doesn’t matter, like when you’re just picking a group of friends to play together, that’s a combination. Suppose you have 5 friends and want to pick 2 to join your game. It doesn’t matter who picks first; the group is the same whether it's Alice and Bob or Bob and Alice.
Permutations vs Combinations
- Permutations are like arranging your toys in different orders, every swap makes a new line.
- Combinations are like choosing a team, the order of choosing doesn’t change who’s on the team.
Examples
- Choosing 2 fruits from a basket of 5
- Arranging 3 books on a shelf
- Picking a team of 4 players from 10
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See also
- What are basic shapes?
- How Does The REAL reason 1 isn't prime Work?
- What are multiples?
- What is cardinality?
- What does not perpendicular mean?