A book club that has K members, as a group, have to read N books. Return how many different ways the members could read the books. All of the books must be read by at least one member of the group and all of the members must read one and only one book.
For Example, for K = 3 and N = 2, there are 6 ways
Note: all of the test cases use small values of n and k to allow for brute-force solutions.
@bmtran, could you please specify the problem to a greater detail? Are there any constraints such as: each member should read at least one book? Do permutations of who reads which book matter? Cheers, VL.
Same for me... i'm not sure if I understand the problem correctly... If my combinatorics is right, the solution should simply be factorial(k)/factorial(k-n) but apparently this is not the case... I assume I'm misinterpreting something???
sorry if i wasn't clear enough. i'm revising my question to be more specific now
Mathematical Reformulation: How many K-letter words can be formed using N-letters if repetition of letters is allowed and each letter appears at least once?....Hint: A closed form solution exist aside the brute force solutions.
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