Help w/ Another Tree Diagram Question?
Dear All,
Could you please answer Question No. 6 please show your work and make an actual tree diagram
Dear All,
Could you please answer Question No. 6 please show your work and make an actual tree diagram
# P("first prize") = 0.04 #
# P("not first prize") = 0.96#
# P ("second prize" | "not first prize") = 8/199 #
Adam has 8 chances that one of his tickets will match the first prize drawn out of 200;
The event that a first prize is drawn is a certainty, and
If the first prize has been dawn there are 199 tickets remaining, so Adam now has 8 chances that one of his tickets will match the second prize drawn out of 199
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Of course! Please go ahead and provide the specific details or the question you need help with regarding the tree diagram, and I'll do my best to assist you.
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When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
When evaluating a one-sided limit, you need to be careful when a quantity is approaching zero since its sign is different depending on which way it is approaching zero from. Let us look at some examples.
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- There's a deck of 52 cards. A five-card hand has three of a kind consists of 3 cards of the same rank, one card of another, and one card of another. How many different 3-of-a-kind hands are there?
- What is the probability of tossing a penny and landing on heads three times in a row?
- What is a simple event in probability? What is a complementary event?

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