If in your data Zero is used then yes.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
Probability is the chance something is going to happen. It has to be DO/PO DO= desired outcome PO= probable outcome. The probability can not be 1 because it has to be a percent chance of out of a fraction, which are both smaller than 1.
False. Probability only predicts the outcome. It does not assure the outcome.
No, the probability of an outcome can't be more than 1.
Uniform probability can refer to a discrete probability distribution for which each outcome has the same probability. For a continuous distribution, it requires that the probability of the outcome is directly proportional to the range of values in the desired outcome (compared to the total range).
Yes it can be 0.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
As probability is a statistical (mathematical) equation, anything multiplied by 0 is0.
No. The probability of any event must, by definition, be in the interval [0, 1].
The probability level for an outcome is the probability that the outcome was at least as extreme as the one that was observed.
Probability is the chance something is going to happen. It has to be DO/PO DO= desired outcome PO= probable outcome. The probability can not be 1 because it has to be a percent chance of out of a fraction, which are both smaller than 1.
The outcomes of a trial can be a negative integer but the probability of any outcome must be in the range [0, 1].
False. Probability only predicts the outcome. It does not assure the outcome.
No, the probability of an outcome can't be more than 1.
Uniform probability can refer to a discrete probability distribution for which each outcome has the same probability. For a continuous distribution, it requires that the probability of the outcome is directly proportional to the range of values in the desired outcome (compared to the total range).
true
You can calculate the probability of the outcome of events.