Hi Tim ,
I am not following the explanations provided by MGMAT. Rarely , i do feel that MGMAT does not provide good explanations in their answers and this problem is one of them.
I am following the explanation provided by GMAT 2007
aps_asks Wrote:Hi Tim ,
I am not following the explanations provided by MGMAT. Rarely , i do feel that MGMAT does not provide good explanations in their answers and this problem is one of them.
I am following the explanation provided by GMAT 2007
price.karr Wrote:Hi Tim/Stacy,
Assuming that JF will be in front or behind one another in exactly half of the permutations makes sense, but does this still hold true if there were an odd number of people? ie, Would 5!/2 be the correct answer if there were only 5 people in line?
rudransh Wrote:The below approach is from MGMAT 1st edition
to begin with
1) J can occupy any of the 6 positions = 6
2) other 4 can occupy the remaining 4 positions in any order = 4!
3) Now for F (who wants to stand anywhere behind J)
3.1) If J takes 1st position then F has 5 out of 6 positions = 5/6
3.2) If J takes 2nd position then F has 4 out of 6 positions = 4/6
3.3) If J takes 3rd position then F has 3 out of 6 positions = 3/6
3.4) If J takes 4th position then F has 2 out of 6 positions = 2/6
3.5) If J takes 5th position then F has 1 out of 6 positions = 1/6
3.6) If J takes 6th position then F has 0 out of 6 positions = 0/6
add (5/6 + 4/6 + 3/6 + 2/6 + 1/6 + 0) = 15/6 for F
Total arrangements = 6 * 4! * 15/6 = 360
The above works well for most of combinations questions with restriction
For some reason, this approach was there in 1st edition of MGMAT books but I could not find this in 4th edition...not sure why?
Joey also cannot be 2nd to last in line because then for Frankie to be behind him, they would have to be next to each other.