Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
Mark R does not need help with this. It is not a homework problem. You can give your answer if you know it.
Well in that case, the answer is 2 and 13. Afer 2 coin tosses it is exactly 50%. After 13 dice rolls it is 6711344640/13060694016, or 51.39%Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
Mark R does not need help with this. It is not a homework problem. You can give your answer if you know it.
Originally posted by: Kyteland
Well in that case, the answer is 2 and 13. Afer 2 coin tosses it is exactly 50%. After 13 dice rolls it is 6711344640/13060694016, or 51.39%Originally posted by: Bigsm00th
Mark R does not need help with this. It is not a homework problem. You can give your answer if you know it.
I set up an excel file for the calculations. Assume an N sided dice. After 1 roll, the probability of having 1 thing is 100%. The probability of having more than 1 thing is 0%.Originally posted by: mugs
Thank you, now explain it. 🙂 (the dice one that is)
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Wow, I'm tempted to, but I *really* hate these types of problems. (and probability in general)
I hate probability problems.
(in case this is a homework assignment, I'm not giving away the answer, just a suggested path.)
Obviously, it has to be at least 6 rolls of the die.
After 6 rolls, what's the probability that at least 2 of the rolls came up the same?
After 7 rolls, what's the probability that at least 2 of the rolls came up the same?
-once you get 50% (or the closest number less than 50%) you have your answer.
I can see why you hate these problems. 😉 After 7 rolls, the probability that at least 2 of the rolls came up the same is always 100%.
The situation you described is the opposite of the situation the OP describes only for the case where the number of rolls is 6.