Double counting (proof technique) explained
In combinatorics, double counting, also called counting in two ways, is a combinatorial proof technique for showing that two expressions are equal by demonstrating that they are two ways of counting the size of one set. In this technique, which call "one of the most important tools in combinatorics", one describes a finite set from two perspectives leading to two distinct expressions for the size of the set. Since both expressions equal the size of the same set, they equal each other.
Examples
Multiplication (of natural numbers) commutes
This is a simple example of double counting, often used when teaching multiplication to young children. In this context, multiplication of natural numbers is introduced as repeated addition, and is then shown to be commutative by counting, in two different ways, a number of items arranged in a rectangular grid. Suppose the grid has
rows and
columns. We first count the items by summing
rows of
items each, then a second time by summing
columns of
items each, thus showing that, for these particular values of
and
,
.
Forming committees
One example of the double counting method counts the number of ways in which a committee can be formed from
people, allowing any number of the people (even zero of them) to be part of the committee. That is, one counts the number of
subsets that an
-element set may have. One method for forming a committee is to ask each person to choose whether or not to join it. Each person has two choices – yes or no – and these choices are independent of those of the other people. Therefore there are
possibilities. Alternatively, one may observe that the size of the committee must be some number between 0 and
. For each possible size
, the number of ways in which a committee of
people can be formed from
people is the
binomial coefficientTherefore the total number of possible committees is the sum of binomial coefficients over
. Equating the two expressions gives the
identitya special case of the
binomial theorem. A similar double counting method can be used to prove the more general identity
[1] Handshaking lemma
See main article: Handshaking lemma. Another theorem that is commonly proven with a double counting argument states that every undirected graph contains an even number of vertices of odd degree. That is, the number of vertices that have an odd number of incident edges must be even. In more colloquial terms, in a party of people some of whom shake hands, an even number of people must have shaken an odd number of other people's hands; for this reason, the result is known as the handshaking lemma.
To prove this by double counting, let
be the degree of vertex
. The number of vertex-edge incidences in the graph may be counted in two different ways: by summing the degrees of the vertices, or by counting two incidences for every edge. Therefore
where
is the number of edges. The sum of the degrees of the vertices is therefore an
even number, which could not happen if an odd number of the vertices had odd degree. This fact, with this proof, appears in the 1736 paper of
Leonhard Euler on the
Seven Bridges of Königsberg that first began the study of
graph theory.
Counting trees
What is the number
of different
trees that can be formed from a set of
distinct vertices?
Cayley's formula gives the answer
. list four proofs of this fact; they write of the fourth, a double counting proof due to Jim Pitman, that it is "the most beautiful of them all."
Pitman's proof counts in two different ways the number of different sequences of directed edges that can be added to an empty graph on
vertices to form from it a rooted tree. The directed edges point away from the root. One way to form such a sequence is to start with one of the
possible unrooted trees, choose one of its
vertices as root, and choose one of the
possible sequences in which to add its
(directed) edges. Therefore, the total number of sequences that can be formed in this way is
.
Another way to count these edge sequences is to consider adding the edges one by one to an empty graph, and to count the number of choices available at each step. If one has added a collection of
edges already, so that the graph formed by these edges is a rooted forest with
trees, there are
choices for the next edge to add: its starting vertex can be any one of the
vertices of the graph, and its ending vertex can be any one of the
roots other than the root of the tree containing the starting vertex. Therefore, if one multiplies together the number of choices from the first step, the second step, etc., the total number of choices is
Equating these two formulas for the number of edge sequences results in Cayley's formula:
and
As Aigner and Ziegler describe, the formula and the proof can be generalized to count the number of rooted forests with
trees, for any
See also
Additional examples
square numbers and a cubic polynomial can be shown by double counting the triples of numbers
,
, and
where
is larger than either of the other two numbers.
and natural number
, there are
length-
words over an
-symbol alphabet having two or more distinct symbols. These may be grouped into sets of
words that can be transformed into each other by
circular shifts; these sets are called
necklaces. Therefore,
(number of necklaces) and is divisible by
.
Related topics
- Bijective proof. Where double counting involves counting one set in two ways, bijective proofs involve counting two sets in one way, by showing that their elements correspond one-for-one.
- The inclusion–exclusion principle, a formula for the size of a union of sets that may, together with another formula for the same union, be used as part of a double counting argument.
References
- . Double counting is described as a general principle on page 126; Pitman's double counting proof of Cayley's formula is on pp. 145–146; Katona's double counting inequality for the Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem is pp. 214–215.
- . Reprinted and translated in .
- .
- .
Notes and References
- ).