License Plate Combinations: Clarifying the Math

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DaveC426913 said:
The set used for license plates, of course. i.e.: 26, sans I, O and Q.
That was an additional assumption/restriction on your part, not one that was given in the problem statement, and one that likely would have led to an incorrect answer.
 
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DaveC426913 said:
While that's probably outside the scope of the question
Yes.
DaveC426913 said:
mentioning it, and providing a second solution - might net you bonus marks!
Or not...
DaveC426913 said:
But the problem does specify a context (license plates) - one in which a non-conventional letter set is specified.
No, there is no mention whatsoever in the problem statement (which I quoted several posts back) about any non-conventional letter sets or any restrictions other than three letters followed by three digits.

Since the original question has been answered to the OP's satisfaction, and further talk about reduced sets of letters is off-topic, I am closing this thread.
 
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haruspex said:
You are double counting some of the numerics. E.g. you are counting 112 as an example of x12 and as an example of 1x2.
So the answer became 36.504
 
haruspex said:
Yes.
I guess there is no a similar application at letters order.
 
requied said:
I guess there is no a similar application at letters order.
Quite so, that was easier. Had you only been told there was at least one A then, depending on your approach, there would have been a risk of double counting.
(But in that specific case the easy way is 263-253.)
 
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