Multiple-choice test outcomes (not all correct): A paper has 4 MCQs, each with 5 options and exactly one correct choice. How many answer patterns result in not getting all four answers correct?

Aptitude Permutation and Combination Difficulty: Easy
Choose an option
  • A
    19
  • B
    120
  • C
    624
  • D
    1024
  • E
    None of these

Answer

Correct Answer: 624

Explanation

Introduction / Context:We count all possible answer patterns and subtract the single perfect pattern where all answers are correct. This is a straightforward application of the complement principle.

Given Data / Assumptions:

  • 4 independent questions.
  • Each question has 5 possible chosen options.
  • Exactly one pattern corresponds to “all correct.”

Concept / Approach:

  • Total patterns = 5^4.
  • Subtract the one all-correct pattern.

Step-by-Step Solution:

Total = 5^4 = 625Not all correct = 625 − 1 = 624

Verification / Alternative check:Alternatively, sum by number wrong (≥ 1) is longer; complement is minimal and exact.

Why Other Options Are Wrong:

  • 120 is unrelated (e.g., 5P3 * something).
  • 1024 is 2^10 and not applicable.
  • 19 is far too small.

Common Pitfalls:

  • Forgetting that exactly one pattern achieves full correctness.

Final Answer:624

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