Probability of drawing a heart: 1/4
Probability of drawing a club: 1/4
Probability of drawing a heart or a club: 1/4 + 1/4 = 2/4 = 1/2
There are 13 clubs in a deck of 52 cards. The probability of drawing 1 club from a deck of 52 is 13/52 or 1/4.
The answer depends on how many cards are drawn.
There are 13 clubs in a standard deck of 52 cards. The probability, then, of drawing club is 13 in 52, or 1 in 4, or 0.25.
erm..one in 52?? 1 in 52
Combination of 52 things taken 2 at a time is (52 x 51)/(2 x 1)=1326. This is the total possible outcomes when drawing two cards from a deck. Combination of 4 things taken 2 at a time is (4 x 3)/(2 x 1) = 6. This is the total possible combinations of two kings (Heart/Diamond, Heart/Spade, Heart/Club, Diamond/Spade, Diamond/Club, Spade/Club). The probability, then, is 6 out of 1326, or 1/221.
A standard deck of cards has 52 cards, with 13 hearts and 13 clubs. To find the probability of drawing either a heart or a club, you add the probabilities of each event: ( P(\text{heart}) + P(\text{club}) = \frac{13}{52} + \frac{13}{52} = \frac{26}{52} ). Therefore, the probability of drawing a heart or a club is ( \frac{1}{2} ) or 50%.
In a standard deck of 52 cards - the probability of drawing any single card of two suits is 1:2 or 50%.
There is a 13 in 52, or 1 in 4, or 0.25 probability of drawing a club from a standard deck of 52 cards.
There are 13 clubs in a deck of 52 cards. The probability of drawing 1 club from a deck of 52 is 13/52 or 1/4.
The answer depends on how many cards are drawn.
1 out of 52
50%
There are 13 clubs in a standard deck of 52 cards. The probability, then, of drawing club is 13 in 52, or 1 in 4, or 0.25.
The probability is 22/52 = 11/26.
erm..one in 52?? 1 in 52
Combination of 52 things taken 2 at a time is (52 x 51)/(2 x 1)=1326. This is the total possible outcomes when drawing two cards from a deck. Combination of 4 things taken 2 at a time is (4 x 3)/(2 x 1) = 6. This is the total possible combinations of two kings (Heart/Diamond, Heart/Spade, Heart/Club, Diamond/Spade, Diamond/Club, Spade/Club). The probability, then, is 6 out of 1326, or 1/221.
Not necessarily. The probability of a complementary event with probability p is 1-p. Two mutually exclusive events, however, don't necessarily add up to a probability of 1. For example, the probability of drawing a King from a standard deck of cards is 1 in 13, which the complementary probability of not drawing a King is 12 in 13. The probability, however, of drawing a Heart is 1 in 4, while the probability of drawing a Club is also 1 in 4. That leaves Diamonds and Spades, which account for the remaining probability of 2 in 4.