I absolutely love your videos. My Algebra and AP Statistics students love them as well. Thank you so much for all the videos over the years. You have made such a difference in the lives of many, many high school and college kids.
You could easily get the answer by using fractions. 3 black balls over 5 balls in total (3/5) giving u the answer of 60%, 0.6 or 60/100. Just a quick way of finding the same solution. :)
If we drew from the deck of 52 cards two aces, what is the probability, drawing three more cards, to get the other two aces? could you explain please ?
I absolutely love your videos. My Algebra and AP Statistics students love them as well. Thank you so much for all the videos over the years. You have made such a difference in the lives of many, many high school and college kids.
spartacus36526
thanks for your compliment
Tour vídeos are so helpful! Thank you for taking the time to do the.
Even in summer vacation i enjoy ur vidéos xD
AminScorpion
yup!
I passed cal 1 , thanks to him.
This is a nice problem, and a great aid to introducing the idea of conditional probabilities. Nice video.
Great, very clear
I can't stand the sound of markers on paper, but I still love your videos, they save my academic life every semester. :'(
got it clear sir. it is much of clerity, thanks alot...
Super helpful thanks so much!
Patrick, you need more videos on discrete math. :(
You've saved me every semester, until now. Sighh...
You could easily get the answer by using fractions. 3 black balls over 5 balls in total (3/5) giving u the answer of 60%, 0.6 or 60/100.
Just a quick way of finding the same solution. :)
one pen, one paper and one mind can change the World ....
hey
Helpful
Not sure why you reduced 6/10 when you were going to render a decimal percentage.
I think he was just showing us different ways to write the answer, all of which were acceptable.
Jesus Canales
yes
aikimark1955
it can be as follow to convert answer in %
6/10 *100/100=60/100=60%
yes😜😜😜😜😜😜😜😜@@jescudi_
amazinggggg
thanks :)
hey
you are so cute
If we drew from the deck of 52 cards two aces, what is the
probability, drawing three more cards, to get the other two aces? could you explain please ?
how
How can I send you an email
Oh, I just realized that 3/5 is the proportion of black balls over the total number of balls.