I'm using Stewart's Algebra and Trig, 4E. In a section on distinguishable permutations, the book gives two examples. One is 15 balls, 4 red, 3 yellow, 6 black, 2 blue. The answer is: [math]\frac{15!}{4!*3!*6!*2!} = 6,306,300[/math]
The next example is 14 construction workers with 7 for mixing cement, 5 for laying bricks, 2 for carrying bricks. The answer given in the book is [math]\frac{14!}{7!*5!*2!}=72,072[/math]
I'm fine with the first example because a red ball can't also be a yellow ball. But for the workers it seems that there would need to be some kind of constraint on which group the workers were placed in (had to be certified to mix cement, for example) for this permutation to be "distinguishable." But if all 14 workers were qualified to do all three jobs, wouldn't the answer just be 14!? Just because they're assigned different roles doesn't necessarily mean that they're "distinguishable," does it? Or am I missing something?
The next example is 14 construction workers with 7 for mixing cement, 5 for laying bricks, 2 for carrying bricks. The answer given in the book is [math]\frac{14!}{7!*5!*2!}=72,072[/math]
I'm fine with the first example because a red ball can't also be a yellow ball. But for the workers it seems that there would need to be some kind of constraint on which group the workers were placed in (had to be certified to mix cement, for example) for this permutation to be "distinguishable." But if all 14 workers were qualified to do all three jobs, wouldn't the answer just be 14!? Just because they're assigned different roles doesn't necessarily mean that they're "distinguishable," does it? Or am I missing something?