There are 26 black cards to chose from for the first card. That leaves 26*25*24*23 left for the other four cards. So 26*26*25*24*23/5! (because we can arrange 5 cards in 5! ways). I get 77740. Apparently the answer is: 454480. I'd appreciate help clearing up my misunderstanding.

Genesis Gibbs

Genesis Gibbs

Answered question

2022-09-06

I tried the Fundamental Counting principle approach: There are 26 black cards to chose from for the first card. That leaves 26 × 25 × 24 × 23 left for the other four cards. So 26 × 26 × 25 × 24 × 23 5 ! (because we can arrange 5 cards in 5 ! ways). I get 77740. Apparently the answer is: 454480.

I'd appreciate help clearing up my misunderstanding. I'd also like to see the combinations approach. Thanks!

Answer & Explanation

Kyan Mcdonald

Kyan Mcdonald

Beginner2022-09-07Added 6 answers

You missed two things, I believe:
1) You want at most one black card. That means you still have to consider the possibility of all cards being black.
2) When counting the cases in which 4 cards are black and one is black like you did, you don't have 5! ways of rearranging, you have less. This is because, as you said, there are 26 black cards to choose from for the first card. You're never considering the case of choosing a black card second or third, so you shouldn't consider rearrangements in which you swap the black card. Only rearrangements of the 4 black cards. Does this make sense?
And, in fact, combining these two points:
26 × 25 × 24 × 23 × 22 5 ! + 26 × 26 × 25 × 24 × 23 4 ! = 454480
clovnerie0q

clovnerie0q

Beginner2022-09-08Added 1 answers

Using combinatorics:
We have ( 26 4 ) ( 26 1 ) + ( 26 5 ) ( 26 0 ) = 454480
The first bit is choosing 4 black cards and 1 black card. Then the other scenario is only choosing 5 black cards! Hope this helps!

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