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30 June, 21:01

Runners in a marathon are randomly assigned to one of ten corrals to start, and each given a green, blue, or red shirt to wear.

Counting principle to find number of outcomes.

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  1. 30 June, 21:28
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    For each runner we have two selections:

    the corrals where they start, we have 10 of them.

    The color of the shirt, we have 3 colours.

    Then the possible outcomes for each runner is the product between those two number of options:

    Outcomes for each runner = 3*10 = 30

    Now, if we have 10 different runners. such that we assign one of them to each one of the corrals, we have that in the first corral we can put 1 of the 10 runners.

    In the second corral we can put 1 of the 9 runners left (9 because we already take one)

    For the third one we need to select between 8 runners, etc

    And so on.

    Then the number of possible outcomes is:

    C = 10*9*8*7*6*5*4*3*2*1

    And remember that for each one of these 10 runners, we have 3 possible colours of shirts, so we need to write this as:

    C = (10*3) * (9*3) * (8*3) (7*3) * (6*3) * (5*3) * (4*3) * (3*3) * (2*3) * (1*3)

    C = 10! * (3^10) = 214,277,011,200

    So in this case we have a lot of possible combinations.
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