006  Cards

#$&*

course Mth 152

6/17 6 pm

006. Cards

*********************************************

Question: `q001. Note that there are 8 questions in this assignment.

Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it possible to get a

hand containing exactly two 5's?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

getting two 5's C(4,2)

getting three cards from remaining deck C(48,3)

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: In order to get a hand containing exactly two 5's we must

select, without regard for order, two of the four 5's, then we must select

the remaining 3 cards from the 48 cards that are not 5's.

There are C(4,2) ways to select two 5's from the four 5's in the deck.

There are C(48,3) ways to select the 3 remaining cards from the 48 cards

which are not 5's.

We must do both, so by the Fundamental Counting Principle there are C(4,2) *

C(48, 3) ways to obtain exactly two 5's.

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q002. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a hand containing exactly two 5's and exactly two 9's?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

Getting exactly two 5's C(4,2)

Getting exactly two 9's C(4,2)

Remaining cards = 44

C(4,2)*C(4,2)*44

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are C( 4, 2) ways to select exactly two 5's and C(4,

2) ways to select exactly two 9's. There are 44 remaining cards which are

neither 9 nor 5.

The total number of possible ways is therefore C(4, 2) * C(4, 2) * 44.

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q003. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'full house' consisting of two 5's and three 9's?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

getting two 5's C(4,2)

getting three 9's C(4,3)

getting a full house C(4,2)*C(4,3)

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are C(4, 2) ways to get two 5's and C(4, 3) ways to

get three 9's. It follows that the number of ways to get the specified 'full

house' with two 5's and three 9's is C(4,2) * C(4,3).

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q004. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'full house' consisting of two 5's and three identical face

cards?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

getting two 5's C(4,2)

getting three identical face cards C(4,3)

getting a full house C(4,2)*C(4,3)*3

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are C(4,2) ways to get two 5's and C(4,3) ways to get

three of any given face card. There are 3 possible face cards, so the number

of ways to get a 'full house' consisting of two 5's and three identical face

cards is 3 * C(4,2) * C(4,3).

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q005. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'full house' consisting of two of one denomination and

three of another?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

possible full houses C(4,2)*C(4,3)*13*12

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: For any two denominations, e.g., a pair of 5's and three

9's, there are C(4,2) * C(4,3) different full houses.

There are 13 possible choices for the pair, which leaves 12 possible choices

for the three-of-a-kind, which to by the Fundamental Counting Principle makes

13 * 12 possible choices for the two denominations. Note that order does

matter when choosing the denominations because one has to be the pair and the

other the three-of-a-kind.

Again by the Fundamental Counting Principle we conclude that there are 13 *

12 * C(4,2) * C(4,3) possible full houses.

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q006. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'flush' consisting of five cards all of the same suit?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

C(13,5)

possible flushes C(13,5)*4

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are 13 cards in any given suit, so there are C(13,5)

hands consisting of all 5 cards in that suit. There are 4 suits, so there

are 4 * C(13,5) possible flushes.

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q007. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'straight' consisting of exactly one each of the

denominations 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

four 5's

four 6's

four 7's

four 8's

four 9's

possible straights 4 * 4 * 4 * 4 * 4 = 4^5

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are four 5's, four 6's, four 7's, four 8's and four

9's. So there are 4 * 4 * 4 * 4 * 4 = 4^5 possible straights from 5 to 9.

STUDENT QUESTION

not sure I understand why is it not C(20,5)

I bet because it is C(4,1)*C(4,1)�..or 4^5 or maybe not�

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE

There are indeed 20 cards which are 5, 6, 7, 8 or 9, which four of each of

the five denominations.

However of the C(20, 5) combinations of 5 of the 20 cards, only a few have

one of each denomination. For example, one of the C(20, 5) combinations would

be 5 of hearts, 5 of spades, 5 of diamonds, 7 of clubs and 9 of hearts.

That's not a straight, nor are most of the C(20, 5) combinations of these

cards.

C(4,1) * C(4,1) * C(4,1) * C(4,1) * C(4,1) = 4*4*4*4*4 = 4^5, so that is

correct. You can check to see that this is a good bit less than C(20, 5).<

Self-critique:

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q008. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'straight' consisting of five cards of consecutive

denominations, assuming that the 'ace' can be either 'high' or 'low'?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

A-10

possible straights 10*4^5

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are 10 possible denominations for the 'low' card of a

straight (any card from ace through 10 can serve as the 'low' card of a

straight). There are 4^5 possible straights for each possible low card. It

follows that there are 10 * 4^5 possible straights.

STUDENT QUESTION: Where does the 4^5 come from? I understand the 10 and 4

different cards of each but did you get the ^5 from the problem before this

one?

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE 4^5 is the number of possibilities for each denomination

of the 'low' card. For example we figured out above that there are 4^5

straights with 5 as the low card.

Similarly there are 4^5 straights with the 'ace' low, another 4^5 with the 2

low, etc., with the 'highest' possible 'low card being 10. So there are 10

possible denominations for the 'low' card, and 4^5 possible straights for

each 'low' denomination."

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

3

*********************************************

Question: `q008. Using a standard deck of cards, in how many ways is it

possible to get a 'straight' consisting of five cards of consecutive

denominations, assuming that the 'ace' can be either 'high' or 'low'?

YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY

Your solution:

A-10

possible straights 10*4^5

confidence rating #$&*:

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

3

.............................................

Given Solution: There are 10 possible denominations for the 'low' card of a

straight (any card from ace through 10 can serve as the 'low' card of a

straight). There are 4^5 possible straights for each possible low card. It

follows that there are 10 * 4^5 possible straights.

STUDENT QUESTION: Where does the 4^5 come from? I understand the 10 and 4

different cards of each but did you get the ^5 from the problem before this

one?

INSTRUCTOR RESPONSE 4^5 is the number of possibilities for each denomination

of the 'low' card. For example we figured out above that there are 4^5

straights with 5 as the low card.

Similarly there are 4^5 straights with the 'ace' low, another 4^5 with the 2

low, etc., with the 'highest' possible 'low card being 10. So there are 10

possible denominations for the 'low' card, and 4^5 possible straights for

each 'low' denomination."

Self-critique (if necessary):

------------------------------------------------

Self-critique rating:

#*&!

&#Your work looks good. Let me know if you have any questions. &#