72 possible combinations.
3 x 3 = 9 cells; 2 colors each
FORMULA: n * (n-1) = 9*8 = 72
There are 1 combination of 4 colours out of 4, 4 combinations of 3 colours out of 4, 6 combinations of 2 colours out of 4, 4 combinations of 1 colour out of 4. A grand total of 15 (= 24-1) combinations.
No. There are nearly 14 million combinations of 49 things taken 6 at a time. Excel does not have that many rows or columns to support that.
Red,white, pink, yellow and a variety of their combinations.
Backpacks come in many colours and combinations. The most common colours are: Black, pink, blue, white, brown, tan, yellow. Other backpacks are a mixture of various colours.
Just use combinations formula. nCr, where n=44, r=6. Plug it into the calculator or use the formula, nCr = n!/[r!(n-r)!] And you should get 7059052 as the number of combinations.
There are 3 primary colors; Red, Yellow and green. Mixing combinations of these colors will give you all the colors.
3*3*3 = 27.
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You use primary colors to mix together, and you can get many secondary colours, depending on how many different combinations you try. Was this question a joke??
Well, there is a formula to figure out how many combinations of universes there would be that fit in the size of the observable universe. The formula is spacetimeatoms*elements and by working this out you would get 10 to the 225 power, factorial.
There are eight rows and eight columns .
There are 18 columns.