Multiply the possible outcomes of the events in the disjoint events
Two events are disjoint if they cannot occur together. In set terms, their intersection is a null set.
Complements or complementary events
I asked this question so someone please help me in this question?
Two sets are said to be "disjoint" if they have no common element - their intersection is the empty set. As far as I know, "joint" is NOT used in the sense of the opposite of disjoint, i.e., "not disjoint".
Multiply the possible outcomes of the events in the disjoint events
Two events are disjoint if they cannot occur together. In set terms, their intersection is a null set.
Yes.
If two events are disjoint, they cannot occur at the same time. For example, if you flip a coin, you cannot get heads AND tails. Since A and B are disjoint, P(A and B) = 0 If A and B were independent, then P(A and B) = 0.4*0.5=0.2. For example, the chances you throw a dice and it lands on 1 AND the chances you flip a coin and it land on heads. These events are independent...the outcome of one event does not affect the outcome of the other.
no
In probability theory, disjoint events are two (or more) events where more than one cannot occur in the same trial. It is possible that none of them occur in a particular trial.
Complements or complementary events
I asked this question so someone please help me in this question?
Yes,Because not all disjoint no equivalent other have disjoint and equivalent
Not necessarily. For a counterexample, A and C could be the same set.
Concurrent independent events or simultaneous independent events
Two sets are said to be "disjoint" if they have no common element - their intersection is the empty set. As far as I know, "joint" is NOT used in the sense of the opposite of disjoint, i.e., "not disjoint".