The probability of getting an odd number when you roll one die is 1 in 2. In order to get an odd sum with two dice, one of them has to be odd and one of them has to be even. The probability of rolling an odd sum is still 1 in 2, since each die is unrelated in probability to the other.
The answer depends on how often you roll it! For one roll it is 1/6 but the probability increases to a near certainty as you increase the number of rolls.
That depends on what kind of dice you are rolling and how many of them you roll. If you roll two 6-sided dice once, the probability of getting the number 100 is exactly zero. You cannot get a 100 on one roll of two 6-sided dice. Other dice and different numbers of them may yield different probabilities.
Since the numbers (number of dots) on normal dice only go from 1 - 6, then I would think the probability of getting the number 100 is zero.
With one roll of three dice, the probability is 7/8.
In one roll the probability is 1/36.
There is a 50% chance.
The answer depends on how often you roll it! For one roll it is 1/6 but the probability increases to a near certainty as you increase the number of rolls.
One.
That depends on what kind of dice you are rolling and how many of them you roll. If you roll two 6-sided dice once, the probability of getting the number 100 is exactly zero. You cannot get a 100 on one roll of two 6-sided dice. Other dice and different numbers of them may yield different probabilities.
Since the numbers (number of dots) on normal dice only go from 1 - 6, then I would think the probability of getting the number 100 is zero.
1:6
1 out of 6 times,or 16.67% probability.
The probability of getting an even number on both dice is (2/6) * (2/6) = (4/36) = 1/9. The probability when rolling two dice of getting one even number but not a "2" is 10/36, which is 5/18.
With one roll of three dice, the probability is 7/8.
On a single roll of a fair die, the probability is 1/3.
In one roll the probability is 1/36.
It is 2/6 = 1/3