yeh that sounds bout right. you want about 30 minutes at least for mistakes and stuff.but i am confused about how to allocate the rest of my time, another hour for Q. 6-9 n then 30 minutes for 10??
Would the answer happen to be 0.27 (2 d.p)Find the probability that of 5 cards chosen from a 52-card deck that 2 will be of the same suit.
this is correct.Wouldn't the answer be 1 as there are only four different suits so by the fifth card you have to double up on at least one suit
Sorry man, I alredy stated it was 1...xDWouldn't the answer be 1 as there are only four different suits so by the fifth card you have to double up on at least one suit
Correct.i) 0.0442 (4dp)
ii) 0.0179 (4dp)
conformation of correct answer please
OK new question....
are you sure you have denoted your C's right?
lol i couldnt get it either. but usually when they have squares of choose that means equating coefficients so i think nightweaver isnt giving us the expansion. the sly bastard.you got me! what's the answer?
ill post an easier binomial in a secondwell if u consider (1+x)^n(1+1/x)^n, that gives you square coefficients for x^n, but i dont know where the (n+1) comes from, because that would hint that there is a differential, but then it should be n not (n+1) gahh
lol you can just describe what you did and ill say yay or nay.ah ok, might take me a little while, im new to this cool fx syntax
got everything except the minus 1.
prove the above using the expansion of (1+x)^n-1