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Encyclopedia > Combinatorial proof

A combinatorial proof is a method of proving a statement, usually a combinatorics identity, by counting some carefully chosen object in different ways to obtain different expressions in the statement (see also double counting). Since those expressions count the same object, they must be equal to each other and thus the statement is established.


A statement is said to be proven combinatorially if a combinatorial argument, or counting argument, is used in the aforementioned fashion to justify the key steps of its proof.


One simple example of a combinatorial proof is the following result on binomial coefficient C(n; k) (read n choose k):


Proposition 1.

C(n; k) = C(n; nk).

Proof. We count the number of ways choosing k elements from an n-set. By definition, C(n; k) is the number of ways choosing k from n. But each time we choose any k elements, we must also leave behind nk elements, which is the same as choosing nk elements (to leave behind). So this number must also equal C(n; nk).


A slightly less trvial example is the following:


Proposition 2.

C(n; k) = C(n − 1; k − 1) + C(n − 1; k) for all 1 ≤ kn − 1.

Proof. We count the number of ways choosing k elements from an n-set. Again, by definition, C(n; k) is the number of ways choosing k from n. Since 1 ≤ kn − 1, we can pick a fixed element e from the n-set so that the remaining subset is not empty. For each k-set, if e is chosen, there are C(n − 1; k − 1) ways to choose the remaining k − 1 elements among the remaining n − 1 choices; otherwise, there are C(n − 1; k) ways to choose the remaining k elements among the remaining n − 1 choices. Thus, there are C(n − 1; k − 1) + C(n − 1; k) ways to choose k elements depending on whether e is included in each selection.


Problems that admit combinatorial proofs are not limited to binomial coefficient identities. As the complexity of the problem increases, a combinatorial proof can become very sophisticated. This technique is particularly useful in areas of discrete mathematics such as combinatorics, graph theory, and number theory.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Mathematical proof - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (796 words)
Proof by induction is where a "base case" is proved, and an "induction rule" used to prove an (often infinite) series of other cases.
Proof by construction, or 'proof by example, is the constructing a concrete example with a property to show that something having that property exists.
Proof by exhaustion is where the conclusion is established by dividing it into a finite number of cases and proving each one separately.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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