Large (Enough) Groups and the Pigeonhole Principle (Mathematics for Computer Science)

Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNOzAziSUt4



Duration: 25:50
20 views
1


Today we will see some more basic examples, with surprising consequences, for the pigeonhole principle! We'll talk about birth months, birthdays, and even the numbers of hairs on a Winnipegger's head!

Time Stamps:
0:00 Opening and the Pigeonhole Principle
1:02 Groups of People and their Birth Months!
10:39 Groups of Poeple and their Birthdays!
17:02 Winnipeggers and Hairs on the Top of Their Heads!
25:30 Closing

Have a beautiful day!

Supporters (to date of publication, by tier (top to bottom)):
----------------------------------------------------------
Patreon Supporters (General Support):
Draikou
Patreon Supporters (Basic Support):
Patreon Supporters (Supporter Access!):
Eric R
-----------------------------------------------------------
Become a supporter today! To support my work and mission to provide free or accessible Computer Science education (especially in theory), subscribe to the channel, share my videos. Please donate and contribute to support my work for more content:
PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/PageWizard
SUBSCRIBESTAR: https://www.subscribestar.com/drpage
PAYPAL: https://paypal.me/pagewizard

Follow also at:
FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/DanielRPage
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/PageWizardGLE
QUORA: https://www.quora.com/profile/Daniel-R-Page
TWITCH: https://www.twitch.tv/pagewizard

#ComputerScience
#combinatorics
#winnipeg




Other Videos By PageWizard Games, Learning & Entertainment


2022-12-22Dan Plays Pokemon Scarlet (December 22, 2022)
2022-12-21What is the Averaging Principle? [FULL PROOF & MORE] (Maths for Computer Science)
2022-12-20Basics of Counting Principles, Permutations, and Combinations
2022-12-19Generalized Pigeonhole Principle [PROOF & EXAMPLE] (Mathematics for Computer Science)
2022-12-16Graphs & Pigeonhole Principle: Two (or More) Vertices Have The Same Degree (Mathematics for CS)
2022-12-16Dan Plays Pokemon Scarlet (December 15, 2022)
2022-12-14Sum of Pairs: Lucky 7 (Mathematics for Computer Science)
2022-12-14Recursion and Basic Recursive Thinking
2022-12-12For any n+1 integers, some difference of two of them is divisible by n - Pigeonhole Principle
2022-12-09Two Winnipeggers Have the Same Numbers of Hairs on the Top of Their Head! (Pigeonhole Principle)
2022-12-09Large (Enough) Groups and the Pigeonhole Principle (Mathematics for Computer Science)
2022-12-09Dan Plays Pokemon Scarlet (December 8, 2022)
2022-12-07Divisible By Ms. Kitty (The Fall of Ms. Kitty)
2022-12-07Pigeonhole Principle [FULL PROOF] (Mathematics for CS)
2022-12-06Pigeonhole Principle and Averaging Principle (Mathematics for Computer Science)
2022-12-05Proving 1/n is o(1) (Little-Oh Definition Proof)
2022-12-02What is little-Oh? "Is" and "not is" Claims!
2022-12-02Dan Plays Pokemon Scarlet (December 1, 2022)
2022-11-30Big-Theta Definition, Usage, Proving 3n^3 + 5 is Θ(n^3)
2022-11-28Big-Omega Definition, Proving log n + 2 is Ω(log n) (FULL EXAMPLE)
2022-11-25What's with Zero? O(0)? O(1)? Is O(0) = O(1)?



Tags:
Computer Science
Algorithms
Data Structures
Education
CompSci
CS
PageWizard
Mathematics
Accessibility
University
COMPSCI
COMP
CSCI
Western
Manitoba
StFX
Regina
Pigeonhole Principle
Winnipeg
Birthday
Birthmonth
Fun
Wild