specificagent1
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2021
- Messages
- 1,969
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2021
what paper is this? also i did not know this content existed... so screwed. Dont really understand all the notations and the A' stuff, i just do probability by thinking (if that makes sense?)Since this question appeared in a Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper(s), it is part of the syllabus. The working for this question is as follows:
View attachment 32965
I hope this helps!
This is from the Hunters Hill High School Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper.what paper is this? also i did not know this content existed... so screwed. Dont really understand all the notations and the A' stuff, i just do probability by thinking (if that makes sense?)
what does the | mean. So what does P(B|A') geeze can do calculus but not this... rip meThis is from the Hunters Hill High School Mathematics Advanced 2020 trial paper.
Since this is a multiple-choice question, your working does not matter as long as you get the correct answer.
The apostrophe is used to denote the complement of a set. A' is all the items that are not in set A.
ummm could you dumb that down please. I dont really get it| means what is the probability of something given that the previous event has occurred. Eg, P(B|A) is the probability of B given A. Independent result is when A=A' because usually A=p and A'=1-p but if they are equal then p=0.5 and this is an even chance which implies results are independent.
I wanted to ask have I made a mistake somewhere?
As was mentioned above, the vertical line "|" means "given that". This means that in the case of P(B | A'), the probability of B depends on that of A', meaning you must be mindful of this in your calculations in order to provide a correct answer.ummm could you dumb that down please. I dont really get it
@ specificagent it look like Jimmy has answeredummm could you dumb that down please. I dont really get it
Doesn't P(A) =1/4 or 5/4
It's a probability, soDoesn't P(A) =1/4 or 5/4