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This suggested edit was approved and applied to the post about 3 years ago by Peter Taylor‭.

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Why $\color{red}{k\dbinom{k}{1}} \neq$ "first choose the k team members and then choose one of time to be captain"?
  • Because you "first choose the k team members and then choose one of time to be captain", shouldn’t the RHS be $\color{red}{k\dbinom{k}{1}}$? The captain is chosen from the $k$ team members already chosen.
  • $\color{forestgreen}{k\dbinom{n}{k}}$ appears wrong to me, because this means that you're choosing the captain from the original group of $n$ people.
  • >### Example 1.5.2 (The team captain).
  • For any positive integers n and k with $k \le n$, $n\dbinom{n - 1}{k - 1} = \color{forestgreen}{k\dbinom{n}{k}}$.
  • >This is again easy to check algebraically (using the fact that $m! = m(m - 1)! for
  • any positive integer $m$), but a story proof is more insightful.
  • >Story proof : Consider a group of n people, from which a team of k will be chosen,
  • one of whom will be the team captain. To specify a possibility, we could first choose
  • the team captain and then choose the remaining $k - 1$ team members; this gives
  • the left-hand side. Equivalently, we could fi rst choose the k team members and then
  • choose one of them to be captain; this gives the right-hand side. $\square$
  • Blitzstein. *Introduction to Probability* (2019 2 ed). Pages 20-21.
  • Because you "first choose the k team members and then choose one of time to be captain", shouldn’t the RHS be $\color{red}{k\dbinom{k}{1}}$? The captain is chosen from the $k$ team members already chosen.
  • $\color{forestgreen}{k\dbinom{n}{k}}$ appears wrong to me, because this means that you're choosing the captain from the original group of $n$ people.
  • >### Example 1.5.2 (The team captain).
  • For any positive integers n and k with $k \le n$, $n\dbinom{n - 1}{k - 1} = \color{forestgreen}{k\dbinom{n}{k}}$.
  • >This is again easy to check algebraically (using the fact that $m! = m(m - 1)!$ for
  • any positive integer $m$), but a story proof is more insightful.
  • >Story proof : Consider a group of n people, from which a team of k will be chosen,
  • one of whom will be the team captain. To specify a possibility, we could first choose
  • the team captain and then choose the remaining $k - 1$ team members; this gives
  • the left-hand side. Equivalently, we could fi rst choose the k team members and then
  • choose one of them to be captain; this gives the right-hand side. $\square$
  • Blitzstein. *Introduction to Probability* (2019 2 ed). Pages 20-21.

Suggested over 3 years ago by Wolgwang‭