Out of 6 wedges, Jody eats 4 wedges obviously so he eats 4/6 of the orange or to make it simple 2/3 of it
The number of ways is 364 if the number of ways in which 4 squares can be chosen at random.
<h3>What are permutation and combination?</h3>
A permutation is the number of different ways a set can be organized; order matters in permutations, but not in combinations.
It is given that:
On a chessboard, four squares are randomly selected so that they are adjacent to each other and form a diagonal:
The required number of ways:
= 2(2[C(4, 4) + C(5, 4) + C(6, 4) + C(7, 4)] + C(8, 4))
= 2[2[ 1 + 5 + 15+35] + 70]
= 364
Thus, the number of ways is 364 if the number of ways in which 4 squares can be chosen at random.
Learn more about permutation and combination here:
brainly.com/question/2295036
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This is only my opinion. I could be wrong.
My guess is:
Somebody else used that book before you, maybe last year or
the year before, and it was somebody who didn't mind writing
in his book.
One day he didn't have time to write down the homework in his
assignment notebook, so he just circled the homework problems
in his textbook.
It would be 18.75 because if you put it into a mixed number then multiply by 5 you get 18.75