never.. the highest number on a dice is a 6
The number of outcomes you would have is number of outcomes x number of times done. Or in this case, number (of outcomes on the dice) x 5 x 5 x 5 x 5 x 5 because you rolled the dice 5 times
6
count the number of times you get number 1, when you roll a pair of dice.. cheerio
The probability that the sum is seven all three times is 1/216.
36 times. But also, you might get the opposite result 36 times.
The expected number of times is the probability x number of throws. Since you have a prob of 1/6 for a seven, then (1/6) * 160 = 26.67 times you would have success. We generally would round up the expected number of successes to the whole number 27.
The number of outcomes you would have is number of outcomes x number of times done. Or in this case, number (of outcomes on the dice) x 5 x 5 x 5 x 5 x 5 because you rolled the dice 5 times
It is a dice game where one rolls a dice seven times, each time deciding to add the number shown in tens, or ones. The object is to get as close to 100 without going over.
The opposite sides of dice always add up to seven, therefore your answer is six
6
1/6 of all outcomes should be a 5. 300*1/6=50 This is the answer regardless of what you are rolling for. You would find whatever number you want and average about 50 times if you were to roll the dice 300 times. You might not get exactly 50, but it won't be far from that. There are faces on a die, and the odds of any one of those 6 numbers showing up is 1 out of 6 times. The above is only true if the dice are not rigged in any way ("loaded dice"). Now, if only one number likes to keep coming up, you might be dealing with loaded dice. In that case, the dice are made for cheating and the mathematical laws of average no longer apply.
count the number of times you get number 1, when you roll a pair of dice.. cheerio
The highest number on a single "die" from a dice set is six. Therefore, the highest number available that one could roll on a dice set would be 6 multiplied by the number of dice thrown.
There are six possible outcomes. Assuming the probability of each outcome is the same (dice has no defects), then you are likely to roll the number two, 100/6=50/3=16.67 times.
The probability that the sum is seven all three times is 1/216.
36 times. But also, you might get the opposite result 36 times.
He should expect it 100 times.