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Aishwarya1204
- Junior | Next Rank: 30 Posts
- Posts: 18
- Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2012 1:08 am
Hey can somebody please help me with this question.
I faced it while giving the Kaplan practice test.
Q: The events A and B are independent. The probability that event A occurs is p and the probability that event B occurs is q. Which of the following is equal to the probability that exactly one of the events A or B occur.
p-2pq
p-pq
p+q-pq
p+q-2pq
p+q
Now, what I did was use the formula : p(that event A occurs) + p(that event B occurs) - p(both events occur)
which gave p + q - pq
But the answer is actually p + q - 2pq.
Thanks.
I faced it while giving the Kaplan practice test.
Q: The events A and B are independent. The probability that event A occurs is p and the probability that event B occurs is q. Which of the following is equal to the probability that exactly one of the events A or B occur.
p-2pq
p-pq
p+q-pq
p+q-2pq
p+q
Now, what I did was use the formula : p(that event A occurs) + p(that event B occurs) - p(both events occur)
which gave p + q - pq
But the answer is actually p + q - 2pq.
Thanks.













