by RonPurewal Mon Apr 04, 2011 6:40 pm
i've never seen the phrase "N-digit combination" or "combination of N digits" in an official problem.
if you're referring to an N-digit number, then, no, you wouldn't include these cases. for instance, 8 is a one-digit number; you can't write it as 008 and claim that it's a three-digit number.
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as for the number 0 itself, the gmat is not going to ask you about such a thing; the gmat NEVER includes questions that are based on the funky boundaries of definitions.
in fact, the test doesn't even touch definitional boundaries that are universally accepted but still weird. for instance, it is universally accepted in mathematics that (a) 1 is not prime and (b) 0! = 1, but the gmat will not test these things.