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Posted on Nov 04, 2010
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Find the probability that at most 5 defective bolts will be given found in a box of 200 bolts if it is known that 2 percent of such bolts are expected to be defective . ( you may take the distribution to be Poisson :,e-4=0.0183)

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  • Posted on Nov 15, 2010
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Find the probability that at most 5 defective bolts will be found in a box of 200 bolts if it is known that 2 per cent of such bolts are expected to be defective .(you may take the distribution to be Poisson; e-4= 0.0183).

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  • Posted on May 31, 2016
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3helpful
2answers

Thank you Eric for your reply. pls ask questions instead of assuming. My HP worked fine last wk. I updated and got a bug. I deleted it. SupportAss+Print&ScanDoctor found no troubleshooting.

for sure, assuming is bad.
but what else can anyone do lacking all useful facts told.
what we assume. only
we assume its a text box and that photos will never be posted here
even though its the most easy forum to do so.
rendering the helper blind.

1: its HP
2: and they all ran ok new or last week, but not today.
3: no OS assumed, but key.
4: no PC stated, but key.
5:if running XP we assume it is infected, and is. or 1 second from now.

printers are not easy to diagnose.
(after all do you have spare parts for it?) no.
Do the stores in town have them , no , cept ink and paper.
what we do know is this,
A: the printer is bad. Hardware
B: the software is bad. or OS infected. bad drivers, bad HP installer used.

So test the printer on another PC known to work running W7 on up. never below.
does it work now.?
yes, then the printer is ok
no , the PC failing is bad,

easy no,?,just one test.
0helpful
1answer

If the supply equation is given as P Qs = -200 + 10P, the price elasticity of supply between R40 and R50, calculated using the arc elasticity of demand, is …

Think this is what the question is asking but not 100 percent sure . What does your text book say ?
First, apply the formula to calculate the elasticity as price increases from R40 at point A to R50 at point B
% change in price quantity PQs1 - PQs2 / (PQs1+PQs2)/2
% change in price = p1 - p2 / (p1 + p2)/2

Price elasticity of supply ========
% change in supply = 300 - 200 / (300+200)/2
100/250 =.4 becomes 40 %
% change in price = 50 -40 /(50+40)/2
10/45= .222 as % is 22.22 %
elasticity = % change in supply / % change in price
= 40 % / 22.22 % = elasticity of 1.8
My formula came from below
https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/microeconomics/elasticity-tutorial/price-elasticity-tutorial/a/price-elasticity-of-demand-and-price-elasticity-of-supply-cnx
0helpful
1answer

7/200 greater than or less than 2/5

There are probably several ways to do this question.

This is the first one that came to mind. Is it easier to make 2/5 an equivalent in terms of 200 or is it easier to make 7/200 an equivalent in terms of 5. I don't like fractions or decimals, so let's go with the first one.

To make it easier to see, I'm going to re-write the equation

2 = x
--- -----
5 200

200/5 = 40 so we are multiplying 5 by 40 to get 200 in the denominator. So we have to multiply 2 by 40 in the numerator to get the equivalent fraction.

Now we have

2 80
--- = -----
5 200

Since 80/200 is equal to 2/5, we can now compare 80/200 with 7/200.

Back to the original question, 7/200 is less than 80/200.

Sorry for being so verbose. I just wanted to explain all my steps;)

Good luck,

Paul
0helpful
1answer

What percent in any number is 5 percent?

5% of any number is one-twentieth of that number. 5% of 100 is 5. 5% of 200 is 10. 5% of 1000 is 50.
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Portfolios with more than one asset: Given the returns and probabilities for the three possible states listed here, calculate the covariance between the returns of Stock A and Stock B. For convenience,...

ProbabilityReturn(A)Return(B)Good0.20.300.50Ok0.50.100.10Poor0.3-0.25 -0.30

Portfolios with more than one asset: Given the returns and probabilities for the three possible states listed here, calculate the covariance between the returns of Stock A and Stock B. For convenience, assume that the expected returns of Stock A and Stock B are 11.75 percent and 18 percent, respectively.
3helpful
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After entering *#3646633#, I had given assert

code *#3646633#
select : device
select : pmic 6318
select : lcm bl setting
put value as under
level 1
freq 200
duty 20
press OK & again do the same process for below values
level 2
freq 200
duty 40
level 3
freq 200
duty 60
level 4
freq 200
duty 80
level 5
freq 200
duty 100
Dec 24, 2009 • Cell Phones
0helpful
1answer

Percent to chemistry problems.

Hello

You should ask a question, we cannot guess what you want.

Percent means per 100 or 1/100. So 75% = 75/100 or 0.75. Here are some exemples of percent calculations with %

Percentage (5% of 250)

250 [x] 5 [2nd] % [=] gives 12.5

Ratio (Ratio of 250 to 5)
250 [/] 5 [2nd] [%] [=] gives 5000.

Add-On (5% add-on of 250)
250 [+] 5 [2nd] [%] [=] gives 262.5

Discount (5% discount of 250)
250 [-] 5 [2nd][%] [=] gives 237.5

Some percentages and decimal equivalents
1 = 100% ; 2 = 200%, 3=300%
0.5 = 50%
0.4 =40%
0.1 = 10%
1/3= 0.33333 = 33.33%
1/4 = 0.25 = 25%
2/3= 0.66666 = 66.66%
1/5 =0.2 = 20%
1/8 = 0.125 =12,5 %
Hope it helps.
0helpful
1answer

It wont install past 83 percent

If you bought the used it is probably defective/ scratched. If you bought the game new try updating the system first, then install
5helpful
1answer

My casio MS-TE caculates 100+5%=105.26315,not

From CASIO FAQS:

Why do I get the wrong answer when doing a percent calculation?

Make sure that you are following the correct procedure.
Adding 10%: 200 [×] 10 [%] [+]
Subtract 10%: 200 [×] 10 [%] [-]
10helpful
2answers

BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION

Hello,
Let us start with a review of the formula for the binomial distribution
f(r;n,p)=n!/(r!(n-r)!)x(p^r)x(1-p)^(n-r)

But n!/(r!(n-r)!)=(nCr) you get
f(r;n,p)= (nCr)x(p^r)x(1-p)^(n-r)

Exemple : n=25, r=6, p=0.7

f(6;25,0.7)= 25 [PRB] [-->] 6 [ x ] {0.7[ ^] 6 }[ x ]{0.3[ ^ ]19}

The arrow means a horizontal scroll once to select the (nCr) function. [ x ] stands for the multiplication sign.
[ ^] is the raise to the power key
The { } are used here as parentheses to make formula legible.

Hoe it helps

Hope it helps

Hope it helps.
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