
In
mathematics
Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
, a permutation of a
set is, loosely speaking, an arrangement of its members into a
sequence or
linear order, or if the set is already ordered, a rearrangement of its elements. The word "permutation" also refers to the act or process of changing the linear order of an ordered set.
Permutations differ from
combinations, which are selections of some members of a set regardless of order. For example, written as
tuples, there are six permutations of the set , namely (1, 2, 3), (1, 3, 2), (2, 1, 3), (2, 3, 1), (3, 1, 2), and (3, 2, 1). These are all the possible orderings of this three-element set.
Anagram
An anagram is a word or phrase formed by rearranging the letters of a different word or phrase, typically using all the original letters exactly once. For example, the word ''anagram'' itself can be rearranged into ''nag a ram'', also the word ...
s of words whose letters are different are also permutations: the letters are already ordered in the original word, and the anagram is a reordering of the letters. The study of permutations of
finite sets is an important topic in the fields of
combinatorics
Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many appl ...
and
group theory.
Permutations are used in almost every branch of mathematics, and in many other fields of science. In
computer science, they are used for analyzing
sorting algorithms; in
quantum physics
Quantum mechanics is a fundamental theory in physics that provides a description of the physical properties of nature at the scale of atoms and subatomic particles. It is the foundation of all quantum physics including quantum chemistry, qua ...
, for describing states of particles; and in
biology, for describing
RNA
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) is a polymeric molecule essential in various biological roles in coding, decoding, regulation and expression of genes. RNA and deoxyribonucleic acid ( DNA) are nucleic acids. Along with lipids, proteins, and carbohydra ...
sequences.
The number of permutations of distinct objects is
factorial
In mathematics, the factorial of a non-negative denoted is the product of all positive integers less than or equal The factorial also equals the product of n with the next smaller factorial:
\begin
n! &= n \times (n-1) \times (n-2) \t ...
, usually written as , which means the product of all positive integers less than or equal to .
Technically, a permutation of a
set is defined as a
bijection
In mathematics, a bijection, also known as a bijective function, one-to-one correspondence, or invertible function, is a function between the elements of two sets, where each element of one set is paired with exactly one element of the other s ...
from to itself. That is, it is a
function from to for which every element occurs exactly once as an
image
An image is a visual representation of something. It can be two-dimensional, three-dimensional, or somehow otherwise feed into the visual system to convey information. An image can be an artifact, such as a photograph or other two-dimensiona ...
value. This is related to the rearrangement of the elements of in which each element is replaced by the corresponding . For example, the permutation (3, 1, 2) mentioned above is described by the function
defined as
:
.
The collection of all permutations of a set form a
group called the
symmetric group of the set. The group operation is the
composition (performing two given rearrangements in succession), which results in another rearrangement. As properties of permutations do not depend on the nature of the set elements, it is often the permutations of the set
that are considered for studying permutations.
In elementary combinatorics, the -permutations, or
partial permutations, are the ordered arrangements of distinct elements selected from a set. When is equal to the size of the set, these are the permutations of the set.
History
Permutations called
hexagrams
, can be seen as a compound composed of an upwards (blue here) and downwards (pink) facing equilateral triangle, with their intersection as a regular hexagon (in green).
A hexagram ( Greek language, Greek) or sexagram (Latin) is a six-pointed ...
were used in China in the
I Ching
The ''I Ching'' or ''Yi Jing'' (, ), usually translated ''Book of Changes'' or ''Classic of Changes'', is an ancient Chinese divination text that is among the oldest of the Chinese classics. Originally a divination manual in the Western Zho ...
(
Pinyin: Yi Jing) as early as 1000 BC.
Al-Khalil
Hebron ( ar, الخليل or ; he, חֶבְרוֹן ) is a Palestinian. city in the southern West Bank, south of Jerusalem. Nestled in the Judaean Mountains, it lies above sea level. The second-largest city in the West Bank (after East ...
(717–786), an
Arab mathematician and
cryptographer, wrote the ''Book of Cryptographic Messages''. It contains the first use of
permutations and combinations, to list all possible
Arabic words with and without vowels.
The rule to determine the number of permutations of ''n'' objects was known in Indian culture around 1150 AD. The ''
Lilavati'' by the Indian mathematician
Bhaskara II contains a passage that translates to:
The product of multiplication of the arithmetical series beginning and increasing by unity and continued to the number of places, will be the variations of number with specific figures.
In 1677,
Fabian Stedman described factorials when explaining the number of permutations of bells in
change ringing
Change ringing is the art of ringing a set of tuned bells in a tightly controlled manner to produce precise variations in their successive striking sequences, known as "changes". This can be by method ringing in which the ringers commit to memor ...
. Starting from two bells: "first, ''two'' must be admitted to be varied in two ways", which he illustrates by showing 1 2 and 2 1. He then explains that with three bells there are "three times two figures to be produced out of three" which again is illustrated. His explanation involves "cast away 3, and 1.2 will remain; cast away 2, and 1.3 will remain; cast away 1, and 2.3 will remain". He then moves on to four bells and repeats the casting away argument showing that there will be four different sets of three. Effectively, this is a recursive process. He continues with five bells using the "casting away" method and tabulates the resulting 120 combinations. At this point he gives up and remarks:
Now the nature of these methods is such, that the changes on one number comprehends the changes on all lesser numbers, ... insomuch that a compleat Peal of changes on one number seemeth to be formed by uniting of the compleat Peals on all lesser numbers into one entire body;
Stedman widens the consideration of permutations; he goes on to consider the number of permutations of the letters of the alphabet and of horses from a stable of 20.
A first case in which seemingly unrelated mathematical questions were studied with the help of permutations occurred around 1770, when
Joseph Louis Lagrange, in the study of polynomial equations, observed that properties of the permutations of the
roots of an equation are related to the possibilities to solve it. This line of work ultimately resulted, through the work of
Évariste Galois, in
Galois theory, which gives a complete description of what is possible and impossible with respect to solving polynomial equations (in one unknown) by radicals. In modern mathematics, there are many similar situations in which understanding a problem requires studying certain permutations related to it.
Permutations without repetitions
The simplest example of permutations is permutations without repetitions where we consider the number of possible ways of arranging items into places. The
factorial
In mathematics, the factorial of a non-negative denoted is the product of all positive integers less than or equal The factorial also equals the product of n with the next smaller factorial:
\begin
n! &= n \times (n-1) \times (n-2) \t ...
has special application in defining the number of permutations in a set which does not include repetitions. The number n!, read "n factorial", is precisely the number of ways we can rearrange n things into a new order. For example, if we have three fruits: an orange, apple and pear, we can eat them in the order mentioned, or we can change them (for example, an apple, a pear then an orange). The exact number of permutations is then
. The number gets extremely large as the number of items (n) goes up.
In a similar manner, the number of arrangements of k items from n objects is sometimes called a
partial permutation or a
k-permutation. It can be written as
(which reads "n permute k"), and is equal to the number
(also written as
Definition
In mathematics texts it is customary to denote permutations using lowercase Greek letters. Commonly, either
and
, or
and
are used.
Permutations can be defined as bijections from a set onto itself. All permutations of a set with ''n'' elements form a
symmetric group, denoted
, where the
group operation
In mathematics, a group is a set and an operation that combines any two elements of the set to produce a third element of the set, in such a way that the operation is associative, an identity element exists and every element has an inverse. Thes ...
is
function composition
In mathematics, function composition is an operation that takes two functions and , and produces a function such that . In this operation, the function is applied to the result of applying the function to . That is, the functions and ...
. Thus for two permutations,
and
in the group
, the four group axioms hold:
#
Closure: If
and
are in
then so is
#
Associativity: For any three permutations
,
#
Identity: There is an identity permutation, denoted
and defined by
for all
. For any
,
#
Invertibility: For every permutation
, there exists an inverse permutation
, so that
In general, composition of two permutations is not
commutative, that is,
As a bijection from a set to itself, a permutation is a function that ''performs'' a rearrangement of a set, and is not an arrangement itself. An older and more elementary viewpoint is that permutations are the arrangements themselves. To distinguish between these two, the identifiers ''active'' and ''passive'' are sometimes prefixed to the term ''permutation'', whereas in older terminology ''substitutions'' and ''permutations'' are used.
A permutation can be decomposed into one or more disjoint ''cycles'', that is, the
orbits, which are found by repeatedly tracing the application of the permutation on some elements. For example, the permutation
defined by
has a 1-cycle,
while the permutation
defined by
and
has a 2-cycle
(for details on the syntax, see below). In general, a cycle of length ''k'', that is, consisting of ''k'' elements, is called a ''k''-cycle.
An element in a 1-cycle
is called a
fixed point of the permutation. A permutation with no fixed points is called a
derangement. 2-cycles are called
transpositions; such permutations merely exchange two elements, leaving the others fixed.
Notations
Since writing permutations elementwise, that is, as
piecewise functions, is cumbersome, several notations have been invented to represent them more compactly. ''Cycle notation'' is a popular choice for many mathematicians due to its compactness and the fact that it makes a permutation's structure transparent. It is the notation used in this article unless otherwise specified, but other notations are still widely used, especially in application areas.
Two-line notation
In
Cauchy's ''two-line notation'', one lists the elements of ''S'' in the first row, and for each one its image below it in the second row. For instance, a particular permutation of the set ''S'' = can be written as
:
this means that ''σ'' satisfies , , , , and . The elements of ''S'' may appear in any order in the first row. This permutation could also be written as:
:
or
:
One-line notation
If there is a "natural" order for the elements of ''S'', say
, then one uses this for the first row of the two-line notation:
:
Under this assumption, one may omit the first row and write the permutation in ''one-line notation'' as
:
,
that is, as an ordered arrangement of the elements of ''S''. Care must be taken to distinguish one-line notation from the cycle notation described below. In mathematics literature, a common usage is to omit parentheses for one-line notation, while using them for cycle notation. The one-line notation is also called the ''
word representation'' of a permutation.
The example above would then be since the natural order would be assumed for the first row. (It is typical to use commas to separate these entries only if some have two or more digits.) This form is more compact, and is common in elementary
combinatorics
Combinatorics is an area of mathematics primarily concerned with counting, both as a means and an end in obtaining results, and certain properties of finite structures. It is closely related to many other areas of mathematics and has many appl ...
and
computer science. It is especially useful in applications where the elements of ''S'' or the permutations are to be compared as larger or smaller.
Cycle notation
Cycle notation describes the effect of repeatedly applying the permutation on the elements of the set. It expresses the permutation as a product of
cycles; since distinct cycles are
disjoint, this is referred to as "decomposition into disjoint cycles".
To write down the permutation
in cycle notation, one proceeds as follows:
# Write an opening bracket then select an arbitrary element ''x'' of
and write it down:
# Then trace the orbit of ''x''; that is, write down its values under successive applications of
:
# Repeat until the value returns to ''x'' and write down a closing parenthesis rather than ''x'':
# Now continue with an element ''y'' of ''S'', not yet written down, and proceed in the same way:
# Repeat until all elements of ''S'' are written in cycles.
So the permutation (in one-line notation) could be written as in cycle notation.
While permutations in general do not commute, disjoint cycles do; for example,
In addition, each cycle can be written in different ways, by choosing different starting points; for example,
One may combine these equalities to write the disjoint cycles of a given permutation in many different ways.
1-cycles are often omitted from the cycle notation, provided that the context is clear; for any element ''x'' in ''S'' not appearing in any cycle, one implicitly assumes
. The
identity permutation, which consists only of 1-cycles, can be denoted by a single 1-cycle (x), by the number 1, or by ''id''.
A convenient feature of cycle notation is that cycle notation of the inverse permutation is given by reversing the order of the elements in the permutation's cycles. For example,
Canonical cycle notation
In some combinatorial contexts it is useful to fix a certain order for the elements in the cycles and of the (disjoint) cycles themselves.
Miklós Bóna calls the following ordering choices the ''canonical cycle notation'':
* in each cycle the ''largest'' element is listed first
* the cycles are sorted in ''increasing'' order of their first element
For example, (312)(54)(8)(976) is a permutation in canonical cycle notation. The canonical cycle notation does not omit one-cycles.
Richard P. Stanley calls the same choice of representation the "standard representation" of a permutation,
and Martin Aigner uses the term "standard form" for the same notion.
Sergey Kitaev also uses the "standard form" terminology, but reverses both choices; that is, each cycle lists its least element first and the cycles are sorted in decreasing order of their least, that is, first elements.
Composition of permutations
There are two ways to denote the composition of two permutations.
is the function that maps any element ''x'' of the set to
. The rightmost permutation is applied to the argument first,
because of the way the function application is written.
Since
function composition
In mathematics, function composition is an operation that takes two functions and , and produces a function such that . In this operation, the function is applied to the result of applying the function to . That is, the functions and ...
is
associative
In mathematics, the associative property is a property of some binary operations, which means that rearranging the parentheses in an expression will not change the result. In propositional logic, associativity is a valid rule of replacement f ...
, so is the composition operation on permutations:
. Therefore, products of more than two permutations are usually written without adding parentheses to express grouping; they are also usually written without a dot or other sign to indicate composition.
Some authors prefer the leftmost factor acting first,
but to that end permutations must be written to the ''right'' of their argument, often as an exponent, where ''σ'' acting on ''x'' is written ''x''
''σ''; then the product is defined by . However this gives a ''different'' rule for multiplying permutations; this article uses the definition where the rightmost permutation is applied first.
Other uses of the term ''permutation''
The concept of a permutation as an ordered arrangement admits several generalizations that are not permutations, but have been called permutations in the literature.
''k''-permutations of ''n''
A weaker meaning of the term ''permutation'', sometimes used in elementary combinatorics texts, designates those ordered arrangements in which no element occurs more than once, but without the requirement of using all the elements from a given set. These are not permutations except in special cases, but are natural generalizations of the ordered arrangement concept. Indeed, this use often involves considering arrangements of a fixed length ''k'' of elements taken from a given set of size ''n'', in other words, these ''k''-permutations of ''n'' are the different ordered arrangements of a ''k''-element subset of an ''n''-set (sometimes called variations or arrangements in older literature). These objects are also known as
partial permutations or as sequences without repetition, terms that avoid confusion with the other, more common, meaning of "permutation". The number of such
-permutations of
is denoted variously by such symbols as
,
,
,
, or
, and its value is given by the product
:
,
which is 0 when , and otherwise is equal to
:
The product is well defined without the assumption that
is a non-negative integer, and is of importance outside combinatorics as well; it is known as the
Pochhammer symbol or as the
-th falling factorial power
of
.
This usage of the term ''permutation'' is closely related to the term ''
combination''. A ''k''-element combination of an ''n''-set ''S'' is a ''k'' element subset of ''S'', the elements of which are not ordered. By taking all the ''k'' element subsets of ''S'' and ordering each of them in all possible ways, we obtain all the ''k''-permutations of ''S''. The number of ''k''-combinations of an ''n''-set, ''C''(''n'',''k''), is therefore related to the number of ''k''-permutations of ''n'' by:
:
These numbers are also known as
binomial coefficient
In mathematics, the binomial coefficients are the positive integers that occur as coefficients in the binomial theorem. Commonly, a binomial coefficient is indexed by a pair of integers and is written \tbinom. It is the coefficient of the t ...
s and are denoted by
.
Permutations with repetition
Ordered arrangements of ''k'' elements of a set ''S'', where repetition is allowed, are called
''k''-tuples. They have sometimes been referred to as permutations with repetition, although they are not permutations in general. They are also called
words over the alphabet ''S'' in some contexts. If the set ''S'' has ''n'' elements, the number of ''k''-tuples over ''S'' is
There is no restriction on how often an element can appear in an ''k''-tuple, but if restrictions are placed on how often an element can appear, this formula is no longer valid.
Permutations of multisets

If ''M'' is a finite
multiset, then a multiset permutation is an ordered arrangement of elements of ''M'' in which each element appears a number of times equal exactly to its multiplicity in ''M''. An
anagram
An anagram is a word or phrase formed by rearranging the letters of a different word or phrase, typically using all the original letters exactly once. For example, the word ''anagram'' itself can be rearranged into ''nag a ram'', also the word ...
of a word having some repeated letters is an example of a multiset permutation. If the multiplicities of the elements of ''M'' (taken in some order) are
,
, ...,
and their sum (that is, the size of ''M'') is ''n'', then the number of multiset permutations of ''M'' is given by the
multinomial coefficient,
:
For example, the number of distinct anagrams of the word MISSISSIPPI is:
:
.
A ''k''-permutation of a multiset ''M'' is a sequence of length ''k'' of elements of ''M'' in which each element appears ''a number of times less than or equal to'' its multiplicity in ''M'' (an element's ''repetition number'').
Circular permutations
Permutations, when considered as arrangements, are sometimes referred to as ''linearly ordered'' arrangements. In these arrangements there is a first element, a second element, and so on. If, however, the objects are arranged in a circular manner this distinguished ordering no longer exists, that is, there is no "first element" in the arrangement, any element can be considered as the start of the arrangement. The arrangements of objects in a circular manner are called circular permutations. These can be formally defined as
equivalence classes
In mathematics, when the elements of some set S have a notion of equivalence (formalized as an equivalence relation), then one may naturally split the set S into equivalence classes. These equivalence classes are constructed so that elements a ...
of ordinary permutations of the objects, for the
equivalence relation
In mathematics, an equivalence relation is a binary relation that is reflexive, symmetric and transitive. The equipollence relation between line segments in geometry is a common example of an equivalence relation.
Each equivalence relation ...
generated by moving the final element of the linear arrangement to its front.
Two circular permutations are equivalent if one can be rotated into the other (that is, cycled without changing the relative positions of the elements). The following four circular permutations on four letters are considered to be the same.
1 4 2 3
4 3 2 1 3 4 1 2
2 3 1 4
The circular arrangements are to be read counter-clockwise, so the following two are not equivalent since no rotation can bring one to the other.
1 1
4 3 3 4
2 2
The number of circular permutations of a set ''S'' with ''n'' elements is (''n'' – 1)!.
Properties
The number of permutations of distinct objects is !.
The number of -permutations with disjoint cycles is the signless
Stirling number of the first kind
In mathematics, especially in combinatorics, Stirling numbers of the first kind arise in the study of permutations. In particular, the Stirling numbers of the first kind count permutations according to their number of cycles (counting fixed poin ...
, denoted by .
Cycle type
The cycles (including the fixed points) of a permutation
of a set with elements partition that set; so the lengths of these cycles form an
integer partition of , which is called the cycle type (or sometimes cycle structure or cycle shape) of
. There is a "1" in the cycle type for every fixed point of
, a "2" for every transposition, and so on. The cycle type of
is
This may also be written in a more compact form as .
More precisely, the general form is