To determine how many groups of 4 can be chosen from a pool of 12 people, you can use the combination formula, which is ( C(n, r) = \frac{n!}{r!(n-r)!} ). Here, ( n = 12 ) and ( r = 4 ). This gives ( C(12, 4) = \frac{12!}{4!(12-4)!} = \frac{12!}{4!8!} = 495 ). Thus, 495 different groups of 4 people can be formed from the pool of 12.
There need not be any in the pool, of course. In any case, the answer will depend on the dimensions of the pool which you have chosen not to share - making this an impossible question.
The number of different 12-member juries that can be chosen from a pool of 45 people can be calculated using the combination formula ( C(n, k) = \frac{n!}{k!(n-k)!} ), where ( n ) is the total number of people and ( k ) is the number of members to choose. For this scenario, it is ( C(45, 12) = \frac{45!}{12!(45-12)!} ). This value can be computed to find the total number of unique juries. The result is 1,264,192,000 different 12-member juries.
50000
It depends on the size of the pool!
-5
Same way they are anywhere else.. names are drawn from a pool of potential jurors.
as many as you want or as many people that could fit in your pool?
If this was meant to be a math puzzle question then you don't know anything about picking juries. There's only ONE way of picking juries REGARDLESS of how many jurors are to be chosen. Picking jurors bears NO resemblance to a numbers game.
People chosen to go into space typically come from a pool of select scientists and mathematicians. Once chosen, training is extremely intense and lasts for months and months.
People chosen to go into space typically come from a pool of select scientists and mathematicians. Once chosen, training is extremely intense and lasts for months and months.
as many as you want or as many people that could fit in your pool?
It depends on the dimensions of the pool which, you have chosen not to share with us. There can, therefore, be no useful answer.
A person can fill an in-ground pool with cement in order to close it forever. People tend to make this decision when they no longer wish to care for the pool.
well alot of people ignore pool people because they think pool people are slopy but i dont agree with wat they think pool people are not slopy and i know i spelled some wrong sry about tht :\
The number of different 12-member juries that can be chosen from a pool of 25 people is calculated using the combination formula, which is given by ( \binom{n}{r} = \frac{n!}{r!(n-r)!} ). For this scenario, ( n = 25 ) and ( r = 12 ), so the calculation is ( \binom{25}{12} = \frac{25!}{12! \cdot 13!} ). This results in 5,200,300 different 12-member juries that can be formed.
Marco polo, chicken fighting (if allowed) its where a strong person puts another person on their back, and you have two or more people do that, and the people on top try and put each other in the water. The last person remaining wins. its really fun to do :)
4 people can be selected from a pool of 15 people in (15 x 14 x 13 x 12) = 32,760 ways.But each group of 4 can be selected and seated in (4 x 3 x 2 x 1) = 24 ways.So the number of different 4-person subcommittees formed from 15 people is (32,760 / 4) = 8,190 .