Ask Question
17 June, 04:48

In a doctor's waiting room, there are 14 seats in a row. Eight people are waiting to be seated. There is someone with a very bad cough who must sit at least one seat away from anyone else. How many ways can this happen?

+2
Answers (1)
  1. 17 June, 04:57
    0
    Answer: 12,972,960

    Step-by-step explanation: There are 14 chairs and 8 people to be seated. But among the 8. three will be seated together:

    So 5 people and (3) could be considered as 6 entities:

    Since the order matters, we have to use permutation:

    ¹⁴P₆ = (14!) / (14-6) ! = 2,162,160, But the family composed of 3 people can permute among them in 3! ways or 6 ways. So the total number of permutation will be ¹⁴P₆ x 3!

    2,162,160 x 6 = 12,972,960 ways.

    Another way to solve this problem is as follow:

    5 + (3) people are considered (for the time being) as 6 entities:

    The 1st has a choice among 14 ways

    The 2nd has a choice among 13 ways

    The 3rd has a choice among 12 ways

    The 4th has a choice among 11 ways

    The 5th has a choice among 10 ways

    The 6th has a choice among 9ways

    So far there are 14x13x12x11x10x9 = 2,162,160 ways

    But the 3 (that formed one group) could seat among themselves in 3!

    or 6 ways:

    Total number of permutation = 2,162,160 x 6 = 12,972,960
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “In a doctor's waiting room, there are 14 seats in a row. Eight people are waiting to be seated. There is someone with a very bad cough who ...” in 📗 Mathematics if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers