I think it's 1 out of 6 chance.
If you roll a die often enough, it is a certainty. If you roll a fair die just twice, the probability is 1/36.
The probability is 1/6.
Rolling a sum of 15 on three rolls of a die, when the first roll is a 4, is the same as rolling a sum of 11 on the second and third roll. The probability of rolling 11 on two dice is 3 in 36, or 1 in 12.
Assuming you are talking about fair, six-sided dice, then the probability of rolling a 1 on the first roll in 1/6, and the probability of rolling a 2 on the second roll is 1/6. Putting these together, the probability of rolling 1 on the first die and 2 on the second die is 1/36. If you do not care about the order, then you could roll 1,2 or 2,1; in this case the probability would be 2/36, or 1/18.
There is one three on a dice, and there are six sides, so the probability of rolling a three is 1 out of 6 or about 16.6%.
If you roll a die often enough, it is a certainty. If you roll a fair die just twice, the probability is 1/36.
One in 6.
If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.If you roll the die often enough, the probability is 1 - a certainty.On a single roll, the probability is 1/6.
The probability is 1/6.
Depends, but if you're talking theoretically the answer would be 1:6
It depends on what the "something" is. The probability that the roll of a regular die will never exceed 6 is 1. The probability that the roll of a regular die will never exceed 3 is 0.5. The probability that the roll of a regular die will never exceed 0 is 0.
fifty percent
Rolling a sum of 15 on three rolls of a die, when the first roll is a 4, is the same as rolling a sum of 11 on the second and third roll. The probability of rolling 11 on two dice is 3 in 36, or 1 in 12.
It is 1: if you roll the die often enough. On a single roll of a fair die, the probability is 1/6.
The probability that you will roll doubles on a pair of dice is 1 in 6. The probability that you roll "something" on the first die is 1 in 1. The probability that the second die will match the first die is 1 in 6. The resultant probability is simply the product of (1 in 1) and (1 in 6).
If the die is fair, the probability is 1/6.
If the die is fair, the probability is 1/6.