JEE – Permutations and Combinations

Chapter 4 – Permutations and Combinations (JEE)

1. Fundamental Principle of Counting

If one task can be done in m ways and another task can be done in n ways, then the total number of ways to perform both tasks is m × n.
This principle is the backbone of the entire chapter. Every permutation and combination problem is ultimately based on this idea.

2. Factorial Notation

$n! = n × (n-1) × (n-2) × \dots × 1$
  • $0! = 1$
  • $1! = 1$
Factorials grow very fast. Always simplify before calculating.

3. What is a Permutation?

Permutation means arrangement. Here, order matters.
Number of permutations of $n$ different objects taken $r$ at a time: $$nP_r = \frac{n!}{(n-r)!}$$

4. Permutation of All Objects

Number of arrangements of $n$ distinct objects = $n!$

5. Permutations with Repetition

If repetitions are allowed and each position has $n$ choices, then number of arrangements for $r$ places is:
$n^r$

6. Permutations of Identical Objects

If among $n$ objects, $p$ are identical of one kind, $q$ are identical of another kind, then:
$$\frac{n!}{p!q!}$$
Very common in word problems (like letters of a word).

7. Circular Permutations

Arrangements in a circle where clockwise and anticlockwise are different:
$(n-1)!$
If clockwise and anticlockwise are considered same → divide by 2.

8. What is a Combination?

Combination means selection. Here, order does NOT matter.
Number of combinations: $$nC_r = \frac{n!}{r!(n-r)!}$$

9. Important Properties of Combinations

$nC_r = nC_{n-r}$
$nC_0 = nC_n = 1$

10. Relation Between Permutation and Combination

$nP_r = nC_r \times r!$

11. Selection with Restrictions

Many JEE questions involve conditions like:
  • At least one particular object
  • At most one
  • Exactly one
Use cases:
  • Total ways − restricted ways
  • Fix one object and select remaining

12. Distribution of Objects

Important cases:
  • Identical objects into distinct boxes
  • Distinct objects into identical boxes
This part requires careful case analysis.

13. Combination Problems Using Algebra

Expressions involving $nC_r$ often simplify using identities.
$nC_r + nC_{r-1} = (n+1)C_r$

14. Common JEE Traps

  • Confusing permutation with combination
  • Forgetting identical objects
  • Ignoring circular nature
  • Not considering restrictions properly

15. Typical JEE Question Patterns

Pattern Approach
Arrangement of letters Use identical permutations
Selection of students Use combinations
Circular seating Use circular permutation
Binary strings Use $n^r$ or combinations

16. Final Revision Checklist

You have mastered this chapter if you can:
  • Differentiate permutation vs combination instantly
  • Handle identical objects confidently
  • Solve circular arrangement problems
  • Apply restrictions correctly
  • Simplify factorial expressions
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