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Binoomial theorem question (1 Viewer)

vds700

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Prove that r .nCr = n . n-1Cr-1. Im fine with this, just using the definition for nCr

If Pr = nCr xr (1 - x)n - r, find the value of P1 + P2 + ...+ Pn.

Thanks for any help
 

3unitz

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vds700 said:
Prove that r .nCr = n . n-1Cr-1. Im fine with this, just using the definition for nCr

If Pr = nCr xr (1 - x)n - r, find the value of P1 + P2 + ...+ Pn.

Thanks for any help
P1 = nC1 x (1-x)n-1
P2 = nC2 x2 (1-x)n-2
P3 = nC3 x3 (1-x)n-3
...

notice the similarity to the expansion of:

(a + b)^n = a^n + nC1 an-1 b + nC2 an-2b2 etc

our a corresponds with (1-x) and our b corresponds with x except that we're missing the first term P0 (which would be (1-x)^n)

P0 + P1 + P2 + P3 + ... + Pn = [x + (1-x)]^n
P0 + P1 + P2 + P3 + ... + Pn = 1
P1 + P2 + P3 + ... + Pn = 1 - (1-x)^n
 
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vds700

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3unitz said:
P1 = nC1 x (1-x)n-1
P2 = nC2 x2 (1-x)n-2
P3 = nC3 x3 (1-x)n-3
...

notice the similarity to the expansion of:

(a + b)^n = a^n + nC1 an-1 b + nC2 an-2b2 etc

our a corresponds with (1-x) and our b corresponds with x except that we're missing the first term P0 (which would be (1-x)^n)

P0 + P1 + P2 + P3 + ... + Pn = [x + (1-x)]^n
P0 + P1 + P2 + P3 + ... + Pn = 1
P1 + P2 + P3 + ... + Pn = 1 - (1-x)^n
thanks for your help. I wish id seen that, it seems so obvious now, i was trying to use the formula for the sum of a GP lol.
 

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