Binomial coefficients with non-integer arguments

from blog John D. Cook, | ↗ original
When n and r are positive integers integers, with n ≥ r, there is an intuitive interpretation of the binomial coefficient C(n, r), namely the number of ways to select r things from a set of n things. For this reason C(n, r) is usually pronounced “n choose r.” But what might something like C(4.3, […] The post Binomial coefficients with non-integer...