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help with homework

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  • B Brakanjan

    Hi Could you guys check if my homework is correct: Q A box (A) contains 8 apples and 4 oranges Another box (B) containes 10 apples and 2 oranges A fruit is picked from a random box, and found to be an apple. what is the chance of this apple comming from box A. Use Bayes theorem. scroll down for my answer A: 8/12 * 1/2 ---------------------- 8/12 * 1/2 + 10/12 * 1/2 = 0.444

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    tidge
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    The true answer is that there is no apple.

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    • B brianwelsch

      42 BW CP Member Homepages


      "Miraculous you call it babe? You ain't seen nothing yet.
      They got Pepsi in the Andes. They got McDonalds in Tibet"

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      Brian Delahunty
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      I just saw this thread now and I was about to answer with that. :-) Regards, Brian Dela :-) http://www.briandela.com IE 6 required.
      http://www.briandela.com/pictures Now with a pictures section :-D
      http://www.briandela.com/rss/newsrss.xml RSS Feed

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      • A Andy Brummer

        There is always brute force. Calculate all posibilities and just count apples and oranges. (or boxes in this case.) My goal is to look at code like a chessmaster looks at a chessboard to see positions and possibilites beyond lines and characters.

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        andy brummer wrote: My goal is to look at code like a chessmaster looks at a chessboard to see positions and possibilites beyond lines and characters. ...and wait for the computer (and illiterate users...) beat you at the game :) My article on a reference-counted smart pointer that supports polymorphic objects and raw pointers

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        • B Brakanjan

          Hi Could you guys check if my homework is correct: Q A box (A) contains 8 apples and 4 oranges Another box (B) containes 10 apples and 2 oranges A fruit is picked from a random box, and found to be an apple. what is the chance of this apple comming from box A. Use Bayes theorem. scroll down for my answer A: 8/12 * 1/2 ---------------------- 8/12 * 1/2 + 10/12 * 1/2 = 0.444

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          leppie
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          You cant compare oranges to apples! top secret

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          • A Andy Brummer

            There is always brute force. Calculate all posibilities and just count apples and oranges. (or boxes in this case.) My goal is to look at code like a chessmaster looks at a chessboard to see positions and possibilites beyond lines and characters.

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            D Offline
            Daniel Turini
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            andy brummer wrote: There is always brute force. Calculate all posibilities and just count apples and oranges. (or boxes in this case.) You can make it sound more impressive calling it "the Monte Carlo statistical modelling" (I'm serious) :) Perl combines all the worst aspects of C and Lisp: a billion different sublanguages in one monolithic executable. It combines the power of C with the readability of PostScript. -- Jamie Zawinski

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            • A Andy Brummer

              There is always brute force. Calculate all posibilities and just count apples and oranges. (or boxes in this case.) My goal is to look at code like a chessmaster looks at a chessboard to see positions and possibilites beyond lines and characters.

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              Daniel Wilson
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              In this case they are one in the same since there isn't a bias towards one basket. 8/12 * 1/2 24 ---------------------- * ----- 8/12 * 1/2 + 10/12 * 1/2 24 = 8 --- 18 = .444

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              • B Brakanjan

                Daniel Wilson wrote: Saying "use Bayes theorem" is kinda redundant just a helpful hint, I suppose. tx:)

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                Daniel Wilson
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                I guess technically we are both wrong since .444 isn't the "right" answer but instead .4444444 with 4 repeating ad infinitum but I can figure out how to put a line above the 4. ;P

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                • D Daniel Turini

                  andy brummer wrote: There is always brute force. Calculate all posibilities and just count apples and oranges. (or boxes in this case.) You can make it sound more impressive calling it "the Monte Carlo statistical modelling" (I'm serious) :) Perl combines all the worst aspects of C and Lisp: a billion different sublanguages in one monolithic executable. It combines the power of C with the readability of PostScript. -- Jamie Zawinski

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                  Daniel Wilson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  Again I am amazed by the power of marketing. :-D

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                  • B Brian Delahunty

                    I just saw this thread now and I was about to answer with that. :-) Regards, Brian Dela :-) http://www.briandela.com IE 6 required.
                    http://www.briandela.com/pictures Now with a pictures section :-D
                    http://www.briandela.com/rss/newsrss.xml RSS Feed

                    B Offline
                    B Offline
                    brianwelsch
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    Great names think alike. BW CP Member Homepages


                    "Miraculous you call it babe? You ain't seen nothing yet.
                    They got Pepsi in the Andes. They got McDonalds in Tibet"

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                    • D Daniel Turini

                      andy brummer wrote: There is always brute force. Calculate all posibilities and just count apples and oranges. (or boxes in this case.) You can make it sound more impressive calling it "the Monte Carlo statistical modelling" (I'm serious) :) Perl combines all the worst aspects of C and Lisp: a billion different sublanguages in one monolithic executable. It combines the power of C with the readability of PostScript. -- Jamie Zawinski

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                      Andy Brummer
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      That's the lazy version. Monte Carlo only calculates some of the results and then assumes all the rest are the same. It's great using statistics to calculate statistical results. There's a 20% chance that there is a 30% chance that it was the second box. My goal is to look at code like a chessmaster looks at a chessboard to see positions and possibilites beyond lines and characters.

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                      • B Brakanjan

                        Hi Could you guys check if my homework is correct: Q A box (A) contains 8 apples and 4 oranges Another box (B) containes 10 apples and 2 oranges A fruit is picked from a random box, and found to be an apple. what is the chance of this apple comming from box A. Use Bayes theorem. scroll down for my answer A: 8/12 * 1/2 ---------------------- 8/12 * 1/2 + 10/12 * 1/2 = 0.444

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                        O Offline
                        Orhun Birsoy
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #24

                        0.5 It is either from box A or not.;P

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