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Combinatorics — Between the Lines

From the fundamentals of counting to the connection between DP and generating functions. An eight-part series that answers the questions textbooks leave between the lines, building intuition for combinatorics.

FO
Folio Official
8 articles
01
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

What does it mean to count? Addition, multiplication, and surjections

Counting is the act of measuring the cardinality of a set. Whether you add or multiply depends on whether your set decomposes as a disjoint union or a Cartesian product. From this single viewpoint, permutations, combinations, and the surjection formula all emerge naturally.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
02
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

The many faces of the binomial coefficient: why nCr is so ubiquitous

Through Pascal's triangle, lattice paths, and the binomial theorem, we uncover the many identities of the binomial coefficient. We also cover the computational machinery essential for competitive programming: factorial tables with modular inverses, and Lucas' theorem for enormous indices.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
03
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

Inclusion--exclusion: why the alternating signs work

The inclusion--exclusion principle corrects for overcounting by alternately adding and subtracting intersection sizes. We prove the general formula using indicator functions, apply it to count derangements, and trace the thread forward to the Mobius inversion formula on partially ordered sets.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
04
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

Recurrences and generating functions: what happens when you turn a sequence into a function

A generating function is the "business card" of a sequence. Multiplication becomes convolution, and recurrences become algebraic equations. We derive the closed form for the Fibonacci numbers (Binet's formula) as a showcase of the method.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
05
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

Why the Catalan numbers appear everywhere: parenthesizations, binary trees, and lattice paths

The Catalan number $C_n = \frac{1}{n+1}\binom{2n}{n}$ answers questions about balanced parentheses, binary trees, lattice paths, polygon triangulations, and ballot sequences. Through the reflection principle and explicit bijections, we explain why all these problems share the same answer.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
06
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

The pigeonhole principle: a surprisingly powerful tool for existence proofs

If you place more pigeons than there are holes, some hole must contain at least two pigeons. This triviality is the starting point for the Erdos--Szekeres theorem on monotone subsequences and for Ramsey theory, illustrating the remarkable reach of non-constructive existence arguments.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
07
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

Counting under symmetry: Burnside's lemma and Polya's enumeration theorem

When objects related by rotation or reflection are considered identical -- as with necklaces -- naive counting fails. Using the language of group actions, Burnside's lemma reduces the problem to a clean formula: the number of distinct objects equals the average number of fixed points across the group.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines
08
Folio Official·March 1, 2026

Combinatorics meets dynamic programming: when counting becomes computation

Dynamic programming is bottom-up evaluation of a recurrence; a generating function is its analytic closed form. We draw the correspondence between the knapsack DP and generating function multiplication, discuss convolution and FFT, and survey the connections across the entire series.

CombinatoricsMathematicsBetween the Lines