currysauce
Actuary in the making
Eight people are to be divided into 2 groups. What is the probability that there wil be 4 in each group?
<sup>8</sup>C<sub>4</sub>/(2<sup>8</sup> - 2) is what I was thinking at first but I got caught up on something. This situation is different to, say, distributing 8 people amongst two distinct rooms since being in one room is different to being in the other. However, in this situation using (2<sup>8</sup> -2) establishes the following two situations as different:lucifel said:i am thinking 8C4/(2^8)
because, to pick 2 groups with 4 people in them there are 8C4 ways to do so. And the total number of ways is figured like this. There are 8 people, each with 2 choices. So yeh. Oh wait are we allowed to have empty groups? If not, you gotta subtract 2 from the denominator...
Tip of the day: Learn to use a calculatorcurrysauce said:nope
the answer is 35/81
any help?
I would think the latterKFunk said:Here's something to twist your noodle: technically <sup>8</sup>C<sub>4</sub> includes the mirror cases since out of the 8 people you can pick:
{p1, p2, p3, p4} or {p5, p6, p7, p8}
If you removed either grouping from the inital 8 you will create the same two groups. Hence it would make sense that <sup>8</sup>C<sub>4</sub> should be divided by two, or rather, that <sup>8</sup>C<sub>4</sub>/2 is the number of ways to make two groups of 4 out of 8 which would make my answer (and that of the book) incorrect.
My question is: Am I going crazy with pre-HSC stress or is Fitzpatrick a gronk?