|
Suppose: 55% of adults like coffee. 25% of adults like tea. 45% of adults like cola.
and 15% drink both coffee and tea 5% drink all beverages 25% drink both coffee and cola 5% drink only tea
a) What percent of adults drink only cola?
b) What percent drink none of these beverages?
Note: This is a high school problem; question may be easily solved. Don't blame me for my ineptitude!
|
I remember doing these problems in my pre-calc class. Forgot now.
edit: use a tree diagram
|
Did you try making a Venn Diagram?
Have each region represent a specific variable, and there are 7 regions non-overlapping regions, coffee, tea, cola, coffe/cola, coffe/tea, cola/tea, and coffe/cola/tea. rewrite the information given and you have a system of 7 varialbes and equations and you can just solve from there.
Also, this isn't a probability problem.
|
45 cola - 25 coffeecola - 5 all - (25tea - 15coffeetea - 5all - 5onlytea)teacola = 15 onlycola?
100 - (15coffeetea + 5all + 25coffeecola + 5onlytea + 0teacola + 15onlycola + (55coffee - 15coffeetea - 5all - 25coffeecola)onlycoffee = 25none?
i always sucked at probability/statistics/w/e so yeah iuno mang
|
^^Avidkeystamper has a clever solution, I've actually never seen this type of problem in my life despite having just taken multivariable calc(lol...). I really wouldn't know how to do it without thinking a lot.
On January 08 2009 14:06 YianKutKu wrote: I remember doing these problems in my pre-calc class. Forgot now.
edit: use a tree diagram You are a hunters player, yes? I think I've seen you around bnet.
|
More effort for homework threads please. All you did was post the problem, what do you know about the problem thus far if anything?
|
Make a Venn Diagram of all three. First one is pretty simple once you get it going but the second one tricked me, though I think I got it right (I took math 12 last year, and I'm in arts now so I'm not really that fresh @ this stuff), however:
Answers should be: a)15% b)20%
Btw you should say that 55% of adults drink coffee/tea/cola, because liking and drinking can be two different things (hope that didn't change the answer).
|
Do you have the answer key? can you tell us the answers? im curious now.
|
Well I tried the venn diagram with 3 overlaps and each section labeled a different drink. But I got confused in the process of trying to find the answer for each question. I know about the addition rules for disjoint events like P(A) + P(B)=P(A or B).
This problem has the overlap and I honestly don't have any idea what to do. I think it has something to do with P(A or B)=P(A) + P(B) - P(A and B) but there's three variables so that got me pretty confused.
|
On January 08 2009 14:17 Resonance wrote: Make a Venn Diagram of all three. First one is pretty simple once you get it going but the second one tricked me, though I think I got it right (I took math 12 last year, and I'm in arts now so I'm not really that fresh @ this stuff), however:
Answers should be: a)15% b)15%
Btw you should say that 55% of adults drink coffee/tea/cola, because liking and drinking can be two different things (hope that didn't change the answer). Oh I just copied the problem from the book. I don't have an answer key though =[
|
|
a) 15% b) 20%
do these add up
I have alot of pracitce with these and this was a rather easy one as long as i know how to add
|
I had the exact same question, ah I forgot though! Solve for coffee and tea and then the remainder should be coke.
A= Coffee B= Tea
P(55)+ P(25)-P(15)= 55
So the remaining should be 45% who like coke
Actually I'm not sure if that's right but I think .45 is one of the answers
Edit: NVM, look at the diagram above ^^^^^^
|
That sucks no answers how are you supposed to know your doing a question right.
|
yeah they do divinek, i just realized the mistake in mine was that i assumed the phrase "coffee and tea" meant "coffee, tea, but not cola" and etc etc etc so it led to me calculating that tea+cola and not coffee was 0
i dunno man honestly it could go both ways
|
Fucking hell everybody has different answers, I am going to do this again.
|
Ah I get the first, still wondering what I subtract to get the second.
Yeah my teacher gave me an even problem; I don't know why. The second answer seems right. Thanks. I never liked venn diagrams =/
|
yeah I made another mistake Divinek has it right.
|
On January 08 2009 14:27 Resonance wrote: No answer? Man that's a bad teaching method how are you supposed to know if what you are doing is right?
Anyway here is my logic for both of your questions:
For the first one it's pretty simple, just find the only Cola drinkers %.
For the second, what I did was get all the percentages (after broken down, 15+25+5+15+5+10+0=75)
Then just go 100% - 75 = 25...rofl yeah ok so I made that mistake there I'm really fucking tired haha
So answers are 15% and 25%
When you get to 3rd/4th year math courses atleast none of the books have answers, at all.
It's suprising how many people got this wrong. Pictures really do help, always, always, always.
|
On January 08 2009 14:30 Divinek wrote:Show nested quote +On January 08 2009 14:27 Resonance wrote: No answer? Man that's a bad teaching method how are you supposed to know if what you are doing is right?
Anyway here is my logic for both of your questions:
For the first one it's pretty simple, just find the only Cola drinkers %.
For the second, what I did was get all the percentages (after broken down, 15+25+5+15+5+10+0=75)
Then just go 100% - 75 = 25...rofl yeah ok so I made that mistake there I'm really fucking tired haha
So answers are 15% and 25% When you get to 3rd/4th year math courses atleast none of the books have answers, at all. It's suprising how many people got this wrong. Pictures really do help, always, always, always. it was a semantics issue, my method was perfectly fine if in the OP the phrases like "cola and coffee" meant exclusive of tea
|
|
|
|