258 16. Answers to Exercises
3.5.2.
(n
0
)
=
(n
n
)
= 1 (e.g., by the general formula for the binomial coeffi-
cients).
3.6 Identities in Pascal’s Triangle
3.6.1.
1+
(
n
1
)
+
(
n
2
)
+···+
(
n
n− 1
)
+
(
n
n
)
=1+
[(
n− 1
0
)
+
(
n− 1
1
)]
+
[(
n− 1
1
)
+
(
n− 1
2
)]
+
···+
[(
n− 1
n− 2
)
+
(
n− 1
n− 1
)]
+1
=2
[(
n− 1
0
)
+
(
n− 1
1
)
+···+
(
n− 1
n− 2
)
+
(
n− 1
n− 1
)]
=2· 2 n−^1 =2n.
3.6.2. The coefficient ofxnynin
((
n
0
)
xn+
(
n
1
)
xn−^1 y+···+
(
n
n− 1
)
xyn−^1 +
(
n
n
)
yn
) 2
is (
n
0
)(
n
n
)
+
(
n
1
)(
n
n− 1
)
+···+
(
n
n− 1
)(
n
1
)
+
(
n
n
)(
n
0
)
.
3.6.3. The left-hand side counts allk-element subsets of an (n+m)-
element set by distinguishing them according to how many elements they
pick up from the firstn.
3.6.4. If the largest element isj(which is at leastn+ 1), then the rest
can be chosen
(j− 1
n
)
ways. If we sum over allj≥n+ 1, we get the identity
(
n
n
)
+
(
n+1
n
)
+···+
(
n+k
n
)
=
(
n+k+1
n+1
)
.
Using that
(n+i
n
)
=
(n+i
i
)
, we get (3.5).
3.7 A Bird’s Eye View of Pascal’s Triangle
3.7.1. n=3k+2.
3.7.2. This is not easy. We want to determine the first value ofkwhere
the difference of differences turns nonpositive:
((
n
k+1
)
−
(
n
k
))
−
((
n
k
)
−
(
n
k− 1