(i) Split the deck into 2: all the diamands (13 cards) in a pile and all the non diamands (39 cards) in another pile. Let's say we want the first two to be non diamand and the third to be the diamand card. For the first, there would be a 39/52 chance of choosing a non-diamand. For the second card, there would be a 38/51 chance. For the third, it must be a diamand to match the question's condition of having exactly 1 diamand. So there's a 13/50 chance of choosing one. However, there are 3! ways that we can choose these three cards, so we must multiply the three fractions by 3!:
39/52 x 38/51 x 13/50 x 3! = 741/850.
(j) We consider 2 cases:
2 diamands and 1 non-diamand: 13/52 x 12/51 x 39/50 x 3! = 117/425
3 diamands and 0 non-diamands: 13/52 x 12/51 x 11/51 x 3! = 22/289
Add these two probabilities since they are separate cases = 2539/7225.