C3

Complement Counting

补集计数

Counting / 计数
Grades G4 - G7
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What It Looks Like

Recognition signals — when you see these, think of this structure:

  • 1The phrase 'at least one'
  • 2The phrase 'not all' or 'avoid a condition'
  • 3Direct counting seems messy but total is clean
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What It Really Tests

The core mathematical idea behind this structure:

Count the total first, then subtract what is NOT wanted.

先算总数, 再减掉不要的, 得到想要的。

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Why Students Get Stuck

Common mistakes to watch out for:

  • Trying to count the target directly when it is complex
  • Subtracting the wrong group
  • Forgetting hidden overlap in the subtracted group
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Your First Step

How to begin thinking about problems with this structure:

Ask: is the unwanted set easier to count than the wanted set?

问自己: 不满足条件的情况是否比满足条件的更好数?

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Try a Problem

G5Difficulty: 2/5

How many two-digit numbers from 10 to 99 have at least one digit equal to 5?

A. 17
B. 18
C. 19
D. 20
💡 Show Solution & Key Insight

Answer

B

Explanation

Total two-digit numbers: 90. Count the complement (no digit is 5): tens digit has 8 choices (1-9 except 5), units digit has 9 choices (0-9 except 5). Complement = 8 × 9 = 72. Answer = 90 - 72 = 18.

Key Insight

'At least one' is a signal to use complement counting: Total - None = At least one.

Common Wrong Path

Trying to list all numbers with a 5, which is error-prone and slow.

Related Structures

These structures share similar patterns or thinking approaches: