SilverKnight wrote: "(1) [Dan] wrote that:
52!/(50! * 2!) = (52*51)*2 = 5304
No, this is incorrect.
52!/(50! * 2!) = (52*51)/2 = 1326
And yes, Dan, I *do* think I can come up with that many different 2-card hands in a deck of 52."
SilverKnight, you divided by 2! to elimiate duplicates, and I didn't. We're both correct.
To demontrate this, consider a 6-card deck:
Ah, Ad, Ac, Ks, Kh, Kd. (i.e Ace of hearts, Ace of diamonds, etc.) If you draw 2 cards, what are your chances of drawing 2 aces ? All the ways to draw 2 consecutive cards from such a deck are:
(Ah,Ad), (Ah,Ac), (Ah,Ks), (Ah,Kh), (Ah,Kd),
(Ad,Ah), (Ad,Ac), (Ad,Ks), (Ad,Kh), (Ad,Kd),
(Ac,Ah), (Ac,Ad), (Ac,Ks), (Ac,Kh), (Ac,Kd),
(Ks,Ah), (Ks,Ad), (Ks,Ac), (Ks,Kh), (Ks,Kd),
(Kh,Ah), (Kh,Ad), (Kh,Ac), (Kh,Ks), (Kh,Kd),
(Kd,Ah), (Kd,Ad), (Kd,Ac), (Kd,Ks), Kd,Kh)
30 total possibilities, with 6 ace pairs. Odds are 1 in 5. But if you now insist on dividing by 2!, they become:
(Ah,Ad), (Ah,Ac), (Ah,Ks), (Ah,Kh), (Ah,Kd),
(Ad,Ac), (Ad,Ks), (Ad,Kh), (Ad,Kd),
(Ac,Ks), (Ac,Kh), (Ac,Kd), (Ks,Kh), (Ks,Kd),
(Kh,Kd).
15 total possibilites, 3 ace pairs. Same result - 1 in 5. The elimination of duplicate ace pairs is counterbalanced by the elimination of all duplicates. The division by 2! buys you nothing.
SilverKnight wrote:
"(2) Please forgive me for taking what you wrote LITERALLY. I simply thought that when you used the word 'only' that you meant 'only'. Silly me."
I still cannot fathom what point you are trying to make here, SilverKnight. If I were to say, correctly, that "It will only be possible for me to win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry within the next 30 years" I really WOULD mean only. And I would not be implying that I was certain to win it. This is Logic 101, sir.
SilverKnight wrote:
"(3) Did you take into account (I'm betting that you didn't...) the notion that you could get a straight or flush before you get your three of a kind?"
Smart bet, SilverKnight. Of course I didn't,
because straights and flushes are completely irrrelevant to the problem at hand. A straight would mean that there were no matches at all, as would a flush. For a match, the two cards MUST be of equal "face value" (2 aces, 2 jacks etc) AND of different suit. Neither a straight nor a flush have any two cards that meet both those requirements.
:-)
Edited on November 20, 2003, 5:01 pm
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Posted by Dan
on 2003-11-20 16:58:08 |