This question is from MGMAT CAT Exam #1, Question 13
Bill has a small deck of 12 playing cards made up of only 2 suits of 6 cards each. Each of the 6 cards within a suit has a different value from 1 to 6; thus, there are 2 cards in the deck that have the same value.
Bill likes to play a game in which he shuffles the deck, turns over 4 cards, and looks for pairs of cards that have the same value. What is the chance that Bill finds at least one pair of cards that have the same value?
A 8/33
B 62/165
C 17/33
D 103/165
E 25/33
Please help me identify my error.
My approach: Probability (Bill finds atleast one pair of cards) = 1 - Probability(Bill finds no pair)
Prob (Bill finds no pair) = n(Bill finds no pair) / total no of ways 4 cards can be drawn from 12
Denominator = 12C4 = 12! / (4! *8!) = 12*11*10*9 / (4*3*2*1)
Numerator Calculation: 1st card can be any card, hence can be drawn in 12 ways
2nd card can be any card, except the one that has the same value as the first card, hence 10 ways
Similarly 3rd is 8 ways and 4th is 6 ways
Therefore numerator = 12*10*8*6
Probability(Bill finds no pair) = 12*10*8*6 / 12*11*10*9 / (4*3*2*1) which is more than 1
(Answer is off by 4! in the denomiator)
Could you please tell me if the logic is incorrect. May be we need to multiply it by 4! because the 4 cards can be inter-changed, but I think that might not be the case.
Looking forward to your comments, thank you.