2015 AIME II Problems/Problem 12: Difference between revisions
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The total number of valid <math>10</math> letter strings is equal to <math>a_{10}+b_{10}=274+274=\boxed{548}</math>. | The total number of valid <math>10</math> letter strings is equal to <math>a_{10}+b_{10}=274+274=\boxed{548}</math>. | ||
==Solution 3== | |||
Notice that <math>a_n = b_n</math> in Solution 2 by symmetry, eliminating most of the work in that solution. | |||
==Note== | ==Note== | ||
Revision as of 15:49, 29 March 2015
Problem
There are
possible 10-letter strings in which each letter is either an A or a B. Find the number of such strings that do not have more than 3 adjacent letters that are identical.
Solution 1
The solution is a simple recursion:
We have three cases for the ending of a string: three in a row, two in a row, and a single:
...AAA
...BAA
...BBA
For case
, we could only add a B to the end, making it a case
.
For case
, we could add an A or a B to the end, making it a case
if you add an A, or a case
if you add a B.
For case
, we could add an A or a B to the end, making it a case
or a case
.
Let us create three series to represent the number of permutations for each case:
,
, and
representing case
,
, and
respectively.
The series have the following relationship:
For
:
and
both equal
,
. With some simple math, we have:
,
, and
.
Summing the three up we have our solution:
.
Solution 2
This is a recursion problem. Let
be the number of valid strings of
letters, where the first letter is
. Similarly, let
be the number of valid strings of
letters, where the first letter is
.
Note that
for all
.
Similarly, we have
for all
.
Here is why: every valid strings of
letters
where the first letter is
must begin with one of the following:
- and the number of valid ways is
.
- and the number of valid ways is
.
- and there are
ways.
We know that
,
, and
. Similarly, we have
,
, and
. We can quickly check our recursion to see if our recursive formula works. By the formula,
, and listing out all
, we can quickly verify our formula.
Therefore, we have the following:
The total number of valid
letter strings is equal to
.
Solution 3
Notice that
in Solution 2 by symmetry, eliminating most of the work in that solution.
Note
This problem has the same general approach as #22 on the 2015 AMC 12A.
See also
| 2015 AIME II (Problems • Answer Key • Resources) | ||
| Preceded by Problem 11 |
Followed by Problem 13 | |
| 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • 5 • 6 • 7 • 8 • 9 • 10 • 11 • 12 • 13 • 14 • 15 | ||
| All AIME Problems and Solutions | ||
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