Hi
I'm sure there must be an easy way to work this out.
I have four products - coal, logs, kindling and firelighters. Product 1 has 8 possible purchasing options (numbers of bags - 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 20), Product 2 has the same 8 options, as does product 3 and product 4 has 5 options. So i have 29 possible single orders (8 + 8 + 8 + 5)
A customer can order any one of the options of the four products.
At one end of the scale they can order just 1 product, up to an option on each of the 4 products.
The different options on each product are numbers of bags, so they would only ever order one option of any of the four products. They may want coal and firelighters in any quantity, or logs and kindling, or logs, kindling, coal and firelighters.
How can i work out how many total possible combinations there are?
Any help would be much appreciated.
I'm sure there must be an easy way to work this out.
I have four products - coal, logs, kindling and firelighters. Product 1 has 8 possible purchasing options (numbers of bags - 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 20), Product 2 has the same 8 options, as does product 3 and product 4 has 5 options. So i have 29 possible single orders (8 + 8 + 8 + 5)
A customer can order any one of the options of the four products.
At one end of the scale they can order just 1 product, up to an option on each of the 4 products.
The different options on each product are numbers of bags, so they would only ever order one option of any of the four products. They may want coal and firelighters in any quantity, or logs and kindling, or logs, kindling, coal and firelighters.
How can i work out how many total possible combinations there are?
Any help would be much appreciated.