Table of Contents
- 1 What is an equally likely event?
- 2 What is the difference between mutually exclusive and not mutually exclusive?
- 3 What is equally likely and not equally likely?
- 4 What is the difference between mutually exclusive and exhaustive events explain with example?
- 5 What is not equally likely events?
- 6 What is the difference between an inclusive or and an exclusive or give an example of each What is the difference between an inclusive or and an exclusive OR?
What is an equally likely event?
Equally likely events are events that have the same theoretical probability (or likelihood) of occurring. Example. Each numeral on a die is equally likely to occur when the die is tossed.
What is the difference between mutually exclusive events and inclusive events?
2 events are mutually exclusive when they cannot both occur simultaneously. 2 events are mutually inclusive when they can both occur simultaneously.
What is the difference between mutually exclusive and not mutually exclusive?
Mutually exclusive events are events that can not happen at the same time. Non-mutually exclusive events are events that can happen at the same time.
What do you mean by mutually exclusive events?
Mutually exclusive events are events that can’t both happen, but should not be considered independent events. Independent events have no impact on the viability of other options. For a basic example, consider the rolling of dice. You cannot roll both a five and a three simultaneously on a single die.
What is equally likely and not equally likely?
Equally likely implies that the all of the outcomes have the same probability of occurring and that the event is fair. If something is not equally likely, then one or more outcomes are more likely to occur than others and the event would be unfair.
What does equally likely mean in math?
1. The outcomes in a sample space S are equally likely if each outcome has the same probability of occurring.
What is the difference between mutually exclusive and exhaustive events explain with example?
Two events are mutually exclusive if they cannot both be true. A set of events is collectively exhaustive where at least one of the events must occur. For example, when rolling a six-sided die, the outcomes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 are collectively exhaustive, because they encompass the entire range of possible outcomes.
What two events are mutually exclusive?
Mutually Exclusive Events
- Turning left and turning right are Mutually Exclusive (you can’t do both at the same time)
- Tossing a coin: Heads and Tails are Mutually Exclusive.
- Cards: Kings and Aces are Mutually Exclusive.
What is not equally likely events?
Are all outcomes equally likely?
The outcomes of a sample space are called equally likely if all of them have the same chance of occurring. It is very difficult to decide whether or not the outcomes are equally likely, however in this tutorial we shall assume in most of the experiments that the outcomes are equally likely.
What is the difference between an inclusive or and an exclusive or give an example of each What is the difference between an inclusive or and an exclusive OR?
Inclusive OR allows both possibilities as well as either of them. So, if either A or B is True, or if both are True, then the statement value is True. Whereas Exclusive OR only allows one possibility. So if either A or B is true, then and only then is the value True.