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Basic Mathematics-II




                    Notes          12! = 1 × 2 × 3 × 4 ×........ × 12
                                   12! = 479001600
                                   When you begin performing combinations, permutations, and probability, you’ll be evaluating
                                   expressions that have factorials in the numerators and the denominators.


                                          Example: Simplify the following:
                                   6!
                                   4!
                                   From the definition of a factorial:

                                   6!  1 2 3 4 5 6  1 2 3 4 5 6
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                                                               5 6   30
                                                                 
                                   4!    1 2 3 4     1 2 3 4
                                                          
                                            
                                              
                                                      
                                                        
                                          
                                   Thus 6! ÷ 4! = 30
                                   Simplify the following:
                                    17!
                                   14!3!
                                   At once, you can cancel off the factors 1via 14 that will be common to both 17! and 14!. Then you
                                   can simplify what’s left to obtain:
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                                            17!  1 2 3 4   14 15 16 17  1 2 3 4    14 15 16 17  15 16 17
                                                                                           
                                                                
                                                                  
                                           14!3!   1 2 3 4  14 1 2 3   1 2 3 4   14 1 2 3  1 2 3
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                                                                        15 16 17
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                                                                                    
                                                                                  5 8 17   680
                                                                         1 2 3
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                                   Observe how we reduced what we had to write by leaving a gap (the “ellipsis”, or triple-period)
                                   in the center. This gap-and-cancel process will turn out to be handy later on (such as in calculus,
                                   where you’ll utilize this technique a lot), especially when you’re relating with expressions that
                                   your calculator can’t manage.
                                          Example: Simplify the following:
                                   n    2 !
                                   n    1 !
                                   To do this, we will write out the factorials, by means of enough of the factors to have stuff that
                                   can terminate off. The factors in the product (n + 2)! are of the form:
                                                      1 × 2 × 3 × 4 ×...× (n – 1) × (n) × (n + 1) × (n + 2)
                                   Now we have created a list of factors that can cancel out:
                                                                  n 
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                                                       
                                             n    2 !  1 2 3  n  1 n  1 n    2
                                                                              
                                                              
                                                            
                                             n    1 !   1 2 3   n    1
                                                    1 2 3  n    1 n   1 n    2
                                                       
                                                     
                                                                                            3
                                                                                                2
                                                                              n n   1 n    2   n   3n   2n
                                                         1 2 3   n    1
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