• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Basic probability

thirtythree

Diamond Member
My philosophy textbook presents these figures and says to figure out how to reach the given solutions for extra practice. I can do some, but I can't find any consistent method that works for all of them. I've looked all over this rather small section of the textbook and, as far as I can tell, it doesn't tell us how to do them.

When throwing 5 dice:
1. The probability of getting no two alike = .0926
2. The probability of getting one pair = .4630
3. The probability of getting two pair = .2315
4. The probability of getting three alike = .1543
5. The probability of getting a full house = .0386
6. The probability of getting four alike = .0193
7. The probability of getting five alike=.0008

UPDATE:

Okay, I think I've got all of them except for 3, though I could still be doing them wrong. I'm not entirely sure why I'm doing 5cX. It seems to work if I do 5c[# of die alike], but if that's the rule, why with the full house, for example, isn't it 5c3*5c2? 😕

7776 = 6^5 (the total number of possible rolls)

1. 6*5*4*3*2/7776 = .0926
2. 6*1*5*4*3*5c2/7776 = .4630
3. 6*1*5*1*4*???/7776 = .2315 - 6c2 works in place of the ???, but I'm not sure why I'd do that, and I'm sure there are a number of ways I could get 15
4. 6*1*1*5*4*5c3/7776 = .1543
5. 6*1*5*1*1*5c3/7776 = .0386
6. 6*1*1*1*5*5c4/7776 = .0193
7. 6*1*1*1*1/7776 = .0008
 
Oops, guess I should explain the rules of the game.

The game of poker dice is played with 5 dice which are thrown
simultaneously.
 
isn't this just binomial distribution?

edit: wait thats just a big maybe...not thinkin clearly right now.

edit: but yeah, these are really simple. I'll figure it out in a few minutes (maybe)
 
Originally posted by: HaxorNubcake
isn't this just binomial distribution?

edit: wait thats just a big maybe...not thinkin clearly right now.

edit: but yeah, these are really simple. I'll figure it out in a few minutes (maybe)
I thought binomial distributions were just success/fail sorta things. Like... not dice.
 
Originally posted by: Fenixgoon
those are wrong.. at least 7, which is the easiest to test.. 1/6 ^5 = 0.0001286

GG philosophy
Naw, it's that times 6. It doesn't matter what the first roll is. EDIT: beat me to it
 
Originally posted by: thirtythree
Originally posted by: HaxorNubcake
isn't this just binomial distribution?

edit: wait thats just a big maybe...not thinkin clearly right now.

edit: but yeah, these are really simple. I'll figure it out in a few minutes (maybe)
I thought binomial distributions were just success/fail sorta things. Like... not dice.

IIRC binomial distributions simply means that each possible outcome has an equal chance
 
for these problems, is it the probability of getting AT LEAST x number the same, or exactly x number the same. it makes a difference
 
goddamnit this stuff is so basic...yet i can't figure it out anymore. 🙁

edit: and since it's philosophy...are you sure that these are 6 sided dice? 😀
 
I'll do the first one: the probability of getting no two alike.

Consider the first dice. It could be one of six numbers. The probability of the second dice being a different number is 5/6. The probability of the third dice being different than the first two is 4/6. The probability of the fourth dice being different than the first three is 3/6. The probability of the fifth dice being different than the first four is 2/6. Therefore the total probability is 5/6*4/6*3/6*2/6 which is about .0926.
 
Originally posted by: HaxorNubcake
for these problems, is it the probability of getting AT LEAST x number the same, or exactly x number the same. it makes a difference
I believe it's exactly, because the numbers all add up to 1.
 
Okay, I think I've got all of them except for 3, though I could still be doing them wrong. I'm not entirely sure why I'm doing 5cX. It seems to work if I do 5c[# of die alike], but if that's the rule, why with the full house, for example, isn't it 5c3*5c2? 😕

7776 = 6^5 (the total number of possible rolls)

1. 6*5*4*3*2/7776 = .0926
2. 6*1*5*4*3*5c2/7776 = .4630
3. 6*1*5*1*4*???/7776 = .2315 - 6c2 works in place of the ???, but I'm not sure why I'd do that, and I'm sure there are a number of ways I could get 15
4. 6*1*1*5*4*5c3/7776 = .1543
5. 6*1*5*1*1*5c3/7776 = .0386
6. 6*1*1*1*5*5c4/7776 = .0193
7. 6*1*1*1*1/7776 = .0008
 
Back
Top