0.97. Just take it away from 1
The probability of event X is 0.3. If events X and Y are complements, what is the probability of event Y?
It depends on the events. The answer is 0.5*(Total number of events - number of events with probability = 0.5) That is, discount all events such that their probability (and that of their complement) is exactly a half. Then half the remaining events will have probabilities that are greater than their complement's.
The probability of the complement of an event, i.e. of the event not happening, is 1 minus the probability of the event.
The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.
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 probability of event X is 0.3. If events X and Y are complements, what is the probability of event Y?
It depends on the events. The answer is 0.5*(Total number of events - number of events with probability = 0.5) That is, discount all events such that their probability (and that of their complement) is exactly a half. Then half the remaining events will have probabilities that are greater than their complement's.
The probability of an event that is as likely as not to happen is 0.5, or 50%. This means there is an equal chance of the event occurring or not occurring. In probability terms, it indicates that the event has the same likelihood as its complement.
The probability of the complement of an event, i.e. of the event not happening, is 1 minus the probability of the event.
The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.The complement (not compliment) of the probability of event A is 1 minus the probability of A: that is, it is the probability of A not happening or "not-A" happening.
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 complement of an event occurring is that it does not occur.
If the probability of an event is p, then the complementary probability is 1-p.
I haven't heard of a component with regards to statistics. If, by chance, you are referring to the complement, it is the probability that the event does not occur. In this case, the complement would be 0.58.
That's the probability that both events will happen, possibly even at the same time. I think it's called the 'joint' probability.
"one third" is not an event and so cannot have complement nor a probability.
The probability of an event that is sure not to happen is 0. This means that there is no chance of the event occurring, making it impossible. In probability terms, events are measured on a scale from 0 (impossible) to 1 (certain), so a probability of 0 indicates that the event will never take place.