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Simple Probability Question (1 Viewer)

Ambility

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I struggle with this topic, though I'm trying to get better. I'd appreciate it if you could show me the working for this question:

 
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Drsoccerball

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I struggle with this topic, though I'm trying to get better. I'd appreciate it if you could show me the working for this question:



So we multiply the events of G passing and S and E failing.
 

Ambility

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So we multiply the events of G passing and S and E failing.
The answer in the back of the book is . Isn't the sample space, or the number of possible outcomes reduced when one person, and only one, must pass? Question 16c, 10C Cambridge 3U HSC for reference.
 

Drsoccerball

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The answer in the back of the book is . Isn't the sample space, or the number of possible outcomes reduced when one person, and only one, must pass? Question 16c, 10C Cambridge 3U HSC for reference.
No because the probability of one person passing doesn't depend on the others results
 

Ambility

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No because the probability of one person passing doesn't depend on the others results
But the question did not say at least one person passed, it said only one person passed. This means that S,G passing but E failing is not a desirable outcome. Are you sure this doesn't effect the answer? Is the textbook answer incorrect?
 

Drsoccerball

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But the question did not say at least one person passed, it said only one person passed. This means that S,G passing but E failing is not a desirable outcome. Are you sure this doesn't effect the answer? Is the textbook answer incorrect?
I struggle with this topic, though I'm trying to get better. I'd appreciate it if you could show me the working for this question:

. If only one of them passes,
He said only one passes.
.
 

InteGrand

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Yes, the driving test question is a conditional probability question.
 

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