Simple probablity question

deftron

Lifer
Nov 17, 2000
10,868
1
0
Say you have a 1 in 1000 chance of something occuring

And you repeat it 300 times (Each time 1 in 1000 chance)

Is the overall chance (after try 300) of it happening 30%
or different ?


30% sounds right to me ...

but if the chance was 1 in 10 and you repeated it 10 times
you aren't going to have a 100% overall chance
 
Jan 18, 2001
14,465
1
0
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 30*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.
 

chuckywang

Lifer
Jan 12, 2004
20,133
1
0
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 300*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Fixed. :)

The three probabilities you wrote down should add up to 1. Therefore, the overall chance of it happening more than once is 1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299.
 
Jan 18, 2001
14,465
1
0
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 300*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Fixed. :)

The three probabilities you wrote down should add up to 1. Therefore, the overall chance of it happening once is 1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299.

technically you only needed to bold ONE zero!
 

chuckywang

Lifer
Jan 12, 2004
20,133
1
0
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 300*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Fixed. :)

The three probabilities you wrote down should add up to 1. Therefore, the overall chance of it happening more than once is 1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299.

technically you only needed to bold ONE zero!

Depends if you quantize the digits or the number.
 

ArmenK

Golden Member
Oct 16, 2000
1,600
1
0
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 30*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Actually the probability of it happening more than once is not hard to find.
P(event happens more than once)=1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299=.036858
 
Jan 18, 2001
14,465
1
0
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 300*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Fixed. :)

The three probabilities you wrote down should add up to 1. Therefore, the overall chance of it happening once is 1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299.

technically you only needed to bold ONE zero!

Depends if you quantize the digits or the number.

at 1 in the morning i don't do much but complain or make smart assed comments.



 

chuckywang

Lifer
Jan 12, 2004
20,133
1
0
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 300*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Fixed. :)

The three probabilities you wrote down should add up to 1. Therefore, the overall chance of it happening once is 1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299.

technically you only needed to bold ONE zero!

Depends if you quantize the digits or the number.

at 1 in the morning i don't do much but complain or make smart assed comments.

Same here. Procrastinating my paper.
 
Jan 18, 2001
14,465
1
0
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
Originally posted by: chuckywang
Originally posted by: HomeBrewerDude
you not specific enough.

the overall chance of it not happening would be .999^300
the overall chance of it happening just once would be 300*.001*.999^299
the overall chance of it happening more than once is a little more complicated.

Fixed. :)

The three probabilities you wrote down should add up to 1. Therefore, the overall chance of it happening once is 1-.999^300-300*.001*.999^299.

technically you only needed to bold ONE zero!

Depends if you quantize the digits or the number.

at 1 in the morning i don't do much but complain or make smart assed comments.

Same here. Procrastinating my paper.

i hear ya
 

deftron

Lifer
Nov 17, 2000
10,868
1
0
Ok .. so if you play pick 3 every day for a year ($365), you only have a 31%
chance of getting an exact match at least once ($500 payout) ... No wonder the lottery makes so much money

Pick 4 is even worse with a 4% (?) chance of winning througout the year


I can't believe there's that many people in line at 7-11 to get tickets every day.
Someone needs to get them a calculator

 

jagec

Lifer
Apr 30, 2004
24,442
6
81
Originally posted by: deftron
Ok .. so if you play pick 3 every day for a year ($365), you only have a 31%
chance of getting an exact match at least once ($500 payout) ... No wonder the lottery makes so much money

Pick 4 is even worse with a 4% (?) chance of winning througout the year


I can't believe there's that many people in line at 7-11 to get tickets every day.
Someone needs to get them a calculator

That's why some people refer to the lottery as a tax on people who are bad at math.
 

ArmenK

Golden Member
Oct 16, 2000
1,600
1
0
Originally posted by: deftron
Ok .. so if you play pick 3 every day for a year ($365), you only have a 31%
chance of getting an exact match at least once ($500 payout) ... No wonder the lottery makes so much money

Pick 4 is even worse with a 4% (?) chance of winning througout the year


I can't believe there's that many people in line at 7-11 to get tickets every day.
Someone needs to get them a calculator


Calculate expected value:
E[pick 3]=$500*(1/1000)-$1*(999/1000)=-$0.50
That is a pretty bad investment.