Question 1113559
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<pre>
In  30*29*28 ways:


Any of 30 students           can be chosen for the president position;

any of remaining 29 students can be chosen for the vice-president position;  and, finally

any of remaining 28 students can be chosen for the secretary position.


It gives you this value.


The order in which they occupy the three positions does matter, so in this problem permutations must be used.
</pre>

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On Permutations, see the lessons 

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- <A HREF =http://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/Permutations/Introduction-to-Permutations.lesson>Introduction to Permutations</A>

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- <A HREF =http://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/Permutations/PROOF-of-the-formula-on-the-number-of-permutations.lesson>PROOF of the formula on the number of Permutations</A>

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- <A HREF =http://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/Permutations/Problems-on-Permutations.lesson>Problems on Permutations</A>

in this site.



Also, &nbsp;you have this free of charge online textbook in ALGEBRA-II in this site

&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- <A HREF=https://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/complex/ALGEBRA-II-YOUR-ONLINE-TEXTBOOK.lesson>ALGEBRA-II - YOUR ONLINE TEXTBOOK</A>.


The referred lessons are the part of this online textbook under the topic &nbsp;"<U>Combinatorics: Combinations and permutations</U>". 



Save the link to this textbook together with its description


Free of charge online textbook in ALGEBRA-II
https://www.algebra.com/algebra/homework/complex/ALGEBRA-II-YOUR-ONLINE-TEXTBOOK.lesson


into your archive and use when it is needed.