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| Bill has a small deck of 12 playing cards |
| Re: Bill has a small deck of 12 playing cards |
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shaji
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Yes !!! U can. It would be the fastest approch. Please provide the answer choices & I can advise the best approcah.
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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Please don't forget to post the full text of the question, including answer choices!
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| Re: Bill has a small deck of 12 playing cards |
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Guest
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The answer choices are : A. 8/33 B. 62/165 C. 17/33 D. 103/165 E. 25/33 Thanks! |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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The method shown in the official explanation is the easiest way (probability 1-X). You can use prob / comb here but you really don't want to given the other method. Did you read that explanation? Do you have any questions about it?
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Guest
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I did understand the explaination but during the test I was unable to solve this question.
:( Is there a way to strategically guess and eliminate few answer chioces ? |
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| YES!!! There certainly is !!!! |
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shaji
Guest
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Here it goes: There r 3 possibilities, namely:1)All four cards are different numbers. 2) Two cards are identical numbers and the other two different 3)There are 2 identical cards. Possibilities 1) and 2) have equal possibilities of occurence and 3) the least likely.Therfore the required probability is the sum of 2) and 3) makig it a little over 50% and the closest answer is 17/33(C). This approach is what a 'clever manager' under conditions of stress owing to shortages of time sometimes does!!! Such approaches come very 'handy' on the GMAT. |
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JAREDROC
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In regards to this question. The Manhatten explanation explains to take the complement of the probability of getting no pairs on the 2, 3, and 4th cards. Taking the complement of not getting a pair on the last three cards to me seems to give the probability of getting one card that matches the first card pulled and does not include getting a match on cards not the same as the first (i.e. cards 2 & 3 matching or cards 3 & 4 matching). Can you please explain?
Thanks, -Jared |
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| Not Quite!!! |
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shaji
Guest
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Consider the three posibilities that I have cited. You will notice that 'Manhatten' is stating the same argument as I have mentioned i.e. The required Probability is 1-(Possibility1)=(Possibility 2+Possibity3) Possibilty 1 is all the cards are different in value. |
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Stacey Koprince
MGMAT STAFF
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Hi, Jared
Most people get confused when thinking about probability b/c they try to do what you are doing - namely, to say that I have to account for "later" possibilities as I'm choosing cards. Don't think about it that way - it seems intuitive but will lead you astray b/c that's not how probability works. Probability is very much counter-intuitive for most people (as is combinatorics). When you do the method we described, you are not leaving open the possibility that you are only checking the "first" card and could have a match on, say, cards 2 and 3. You are covering all possibilities. |
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| Using an alternate method |
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virgo_rookie
Guest
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Hi Stacey/Ron,
I was trying to use an alternate method to find the no of ways of selecting 4 cards from the deck all with diff nos, however I am getting confused behind the reasoning for the one which is the correct method. Pls help resolve the same: Method 1: 6C4(to select the 4 different card nos between 1 & 6 to be there in the selection of 4 cards)*(2^4)(for each diff no we have 2 diff options)=15*16. Now the no ways for total different slection of 4 cards is 12C4=33*15 The no of ways reqd= 1-(15*16)/(33*15)=1-16/33=17/33 Method2: (6C1*2)*(5C1*2)*(4C1*2)*(3C1*2)=24*15 which actually now turns out be higher than possible for no of ways. The method2 though wrong is beyond comprehension as to why it is wrong. Kindly throw light in fallacy in reasoning/logic/concept. Thanks. |
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| Elegant!!! |
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shaji
Guest
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Method2 is erroneous because the order in which the cards are chosen is inconsequential as it leads to multiple of double counting. (1234=4321=2143=3214.........). In addition there is a computional error in expression in Method 2. The correct value is 360*16. To correct the double counting effect, you divide the expression by 4! which leads to 15*16 which is what you have correctly arrived at using Method1.
Method1 is elegant!!! . |
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| Thanks |
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virgo_rookie
Guest
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Shaji, thanks for the explanation.
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| Bill has a small deck of 12 playing cards |
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