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Combinatorial Interpretation of an Extension of Gaussian PolynomialsIt is well-known that the Gaussian polynomial (or Gaussian coefficient, q-binomial coefficient) $\binom{n}{k}_q$ counts the number of $k$-dimensional subspaces of an $n$-dimensional vector space over $GF(q)$. A generalization of $\binom{n}{k}_q$ are the so-called $p,q$-binomial coefficients, $\binom{n}{k}_{p,q}=\frac{{[n]}!}{[k]![n-k]!}$, where $[n]=\frac{p^n-q^n}{p-q}$ and $[n]!=[n][n-1]\cdots[2][1]$. The $p,q$-binomials equal the $q$-binomials when $q=1$. Question 1: Is there a vector space combinatorial interpretation for the $p,q$-binomials? If there is, how does the underlying two-parameter field look like? (There is a combinatorial interpretation in terms of tableaux and lattice paths but I'm more interested with the subspace interpretation.) Question 2 (somewhat related): A number of mathematicians have talked about the so-called $q$-disease (the widespread (at least those among working in $q$-series) interest in extending classical results to $q$-analogues.) Is there a $p,q$-disease? PS I'm supposed to write $[n]_{p,q}$ but it doesn't seem to work with \frac.
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