1. The document provides formulas for calculating probabilities related to three-set problems involving unions, intersections, and complements.
2. It gives formulas to calculate the number of people in exactly one set, exactly two sets, exactly three sets, two or more sets, and at least one set.
3. The formulas use P(A), P(B), P(C), P(AnB), P(AnC), P(BnC), and P(AnBnC) to represent the probabilities of elements in sets A, B, C, their intersections, and unions.
1. The document provides formulas for calculating probabilities related to three-set problems involving unions, intersections, and complements.
2. It gives formulas to calculate the number of people in exactly one set, exactly two sets, exactly three sets, two or more sets, and at least one set.
3. The formulas use P(A), P(B), P(C), P(AnB), P(AnC), P(BnC), and P(AnBnC) to represent the probabilities of elements in sets A, B, C, their intersections, and unions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
1. The document provides formulas for calculating probabilities related to three-set problems involving unions, intersections, and complements.
2. It gives formulas to calculate the number of people in exactly one set, exactly two sets, exactly three sets, two or more sets, and at least one set.
3. The formulas use P(A), P(B), P(C), P(AnB), P(AnC), P(BnC), and P(AnBnC) to represent the probabilities of elements in sets A, B, C, their intersections, and unions.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd