Independence of the events.
If two events are independent of one another, then the outcome of one event does not depend on the outcome of the other event. Example is flipping of two coins. The second coin is not dependent on the outcome of the first flip. But if you want to know if the two coins are the same (either both heads or both tails), then that outcome is dependent on the first coin and the second coin.
Independent events.
Two events complementary when one event occurs if and only if the other does not. Simple event do not depend on other events, it consists of on and only one outcome Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc Two events complementary when one event occurs if and only if the other does not. Simple event do not depend on other events, it consists of on and only one outcome Doctor Chuck aka mathdoc
Dependent event :)
It is an impossible event - which has probability zero.
One-way independence.
An outcome is the result of a single trial. For example, if I roll a die, one outcome would be a six. An event is a collection of one or more outcomes. Using the example of rolling a die, an event might be rolling two sixes in a row. Thus this event is comprised of two outcomes - rolling and six and rolling another six.
When the outcome consists of an event that is not the one you are looking for.
A dependent event
It is still an event.
No. The probability of an outcome (or event) is always a number between 0 and 1.
A claim of cause asserts that one event or factor has directly led to another event or outcome. It seeks to establish a causal relationship between the two variables, arguing that one is the reason for the occurrence of the other.