It is replaced or not replaced?Paj20 said:There are 3 types of ice creams, Strawberry, Chocolate and Caramel. Ike wants any two different flavors on her ice cream. What is the probability that she chooses Strawberry first and chocolate second?
i no... it dosent say thats what i was wondering.. the answer is 1/9 according to the booklyounamu said:It is replaced or not replaced?
Replaced: 1/3 x 1/3 = 1/9
Not replaced: 1/3 x 1/2 = 1/6
Yeah, I knew it was 1/9 too considering the nature of the question. It's not like the flavour gets depleted once you use one.Paj20 said:i no... it dosent say thats what i was wondering.. the answer is 1/9 according to the book
cud be one scoop left of each =Plyounamu said:Yeah, I knew it was 1/9 too considering the nature of the question. It's not like the flavour gets depleted once you use one.
@__@ thats alot of time wastedPC said:Just think of listing all the possibilities.
S,S
S,Ch
S,Ca
Ch,S
Ch,Ch
Ch,Ca
Ca,S
Ca,Ch
Ca,Ch
Clearly, there is only one way of getting S,Ch, so the probability is 1/9.
However, is the question restricted so that it's not possible to have two scoops of the same flavour. In that case, delete the S,S, Ch,Ch and Ca,Ca and the probability is 1/6.
It's not really a case of replacement or non-replacement.
Shall we calculate the chance of that?Timothy.Siu said:cud be one scoop left of each =P
PC said:Just think of listing all the possibilities.
S,S
S,Ch
S,Ca
Ch,S
Ch,Ch
Ch,Ca
Ca,S
Ca,Ch
Ca,Ch
Clearly, there is only one way of getting S,Ch, so the probability is 1/9.
However, is the question restricted so that it's not possible to have two scoops of the same flavour. In that case, delete the S,S, Ch,Ch and Ca,Ca and the probability is 1/6.
It's not really a case of replacement or non-replacement.