Yes, it is possible for two dependent events to have the same probability of occurring. The probability of an event is dependent on the outcomes of other events, and it is influenced by the relationship between these events. So, it is conceivable for two dependent events to have equal probabilities.
equiprobable events.
No, the combined probability is the product of the probability of their separate occurrances.
yss
That will depends entirely on how the two events are related. For instance, there may be a weak correlation, or a strong correlation, between two probabilities. You really need more information, about how the events are related. There is no single simple rule.
rghrugfy
Independent events with a probability of zero
That probability is the product of the probabilities of the two individual events; for example, if event A has a probability of 50% and event B has a probability of 10%, the probability that both events will happen is 50% x 10% = 5%.
The calculation is equal to the sum of their probabilities less the probability of both events occuring. If two events are mutually exclusive then the combined probability that one or the other will occur is simply the sum of their respective probabilities, because the chance of both occurring is by definition zero.
Yes, it is possible for two dependent events to have the same probability of occurring. The probability of an event is dependent on the outcomes of other events, and it is influenced by the relationship between these events. So, it is conceivable for two dependent events to have equal probabilities.
equiprobable events.
A dependent probability.
Equally likely events.
Equal
The probability of two independent events occurring together is the product of both events. yw lazy odyssey users like me :)
No, the combined probability is the product of the probability of their separate occurrances.
Two independent events occurring.