What's new | Course info | Texts | Questionnaire | Grading, test dates | Policy on collaboration | Puzzles | Exercises | Tests | Statistics
24th set of Exercises posted (class 6-4; posted 6-5 at 4:40 am). (Click the "Exercises" tab on the banner.)
New handout: corrected proof of the Erdős - Ko - Rado Theorem.
New tab on banner: Tests. Wed 5-28 quiz moved to Fri 5-30.
TA will hold offices hour Tuesday, May 20, at 5pm in the usual place (Ry 162) and every Tuesday afterwards (May 27, June 3) (the day before each quiz).
TEST DATES and grading scheme REVISED: three new 10-minute quizzes added. Click "Grading, test dates" on the banner.
Midterm-2 statistics updated 5-20. (Click "Statistics" tab on the banner.)
Second Midterm posted. Click "Tests" on the banner. Solve the problems you didn't. You may encounter them again.
TA holds office hour every Thursday 5pm - 6pm in Ry-162 ("theory lounge")
NEW QUESTIONNAIRE posted. Click "Questionnaire" on the banner. PLEASE RESPOND by the end of this week (April 27) even if you sent a similar email previously - there are many extra questions.
Teaching Assistant: Sourav Chakraborty; e-mail: {firstname}(at)cs(dot)uchicago(dot)edu.
Course description
Methods of enumeration, construction, and proof of
existence of discrete structures are discussed in
conjunction with the basic concepts of probability
theory over a finite sample space (random variables,
independence, expected value, standard deviation, and
Chebyshev's and Chernoff's inequalities). Concepts
of combinatorial optimization such as duality and
good characterization are introduced. Topics include
counting, generating functions, Latin squares,
finite projective planes, graph theory, matchings, flows
in networks, Ramsey theory, coloring graphs and set systems,
extremal combinatorics. The highlights include unexpected
applications of linear algebra and number theory.
Mathematical puzzles will pepper the course.
The instructor hopes that the course will be fun in
many ways.
Go to top
Your primary text will be your course notes, so please make sure you don't miss classes. If you do, you should copy somebody's class notes and discuss the class with them.
There will also be frequent web postings. Please always check this website.
Online texts: instructor's "Discrete Mathematics" lecture notes in PDF (preliminary, incomplete drafts):
Printed text:
J. H. van Lint, R. M. Wilson: "A Course in Combinatorics," Cambrdge University Press, ISBN# 0 521 00601 5
Recommended supplementary reading:
J. Matoušek, J. Nešetříl: "Invitation to Discrete Mathematics," by Oxford University Press, ISBN# 098502079.
Revised 5-19. Based on tests and class participation. Four quizzes (the first quiz is 20 minutes and weighs 8%, each of the subsequent quizzes are 10 minutes for 4% each), two midterms (21% each), final exam (35%), class participation (3%).