Quizzes & Puzzles37 mins ago
Help With Probability
57 Answers
Help with probability
Say you are playing a gambling game which is 0.5 To play
The prizes are as follows:
52% lose
1% chance to win 0.52
1% chance to win 0.7
1% chance to win 0.72
45% chance to win 1.0
After 1000 games How much will you have spent and how much are you likely to win and how do you predict/ calculate how much you will win?
Say you are playing a gambling game which is 0.5 To play
The prizes are as follows:
52% lose
1% chance to win 0.52
1% chance to win 0.7
1% chance to win 0.72
45% chance to win 1.0
After 1000 games How much will you have spent and how much are you likely to win and how do you predict/ calculate how much you will win?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by ukanonymous. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In American Roulette, there are two "zeroes" (0, 00) and 36 non-zero numbers (18 red and 18 black). If a player bets 1 unit on red, his chance of winning 1 unit is therefore 18/38 and his chance of losing 1 unit is 20/38. The player's expected value is EV = (18/38 x 1) + (20/38 x -1) = 18/38 - 20/38 = -2/38 = -5.26%. Therefore, the house edge is 5.26%. After 10 spins, betting 1 unit per spin, the average house profit will be 10 x 1 x 5.26% = 0.53 units. Of course, the casino may not win exactly 53 cents of a unit; this figure is the average casino profit from each player if it had millions of players each betting for 10 spins at 1 unit per spin. European and French roulette wheels have only one "zero" and therefore the house advantage (ignoring the en prison rule) is equal to 1/37 = 2.7%.[1]
This has lost me really how do I quantify this?
This has lost me really how do I quantify this?
"...in fact chance has no laws..."
Not really true, because chance is about telling you what to expect -- and, on top of proven rules such as the Law of Large Numbers, tells you what is almost certain to happen. And it is part of the law, of course, that what is almost certain to happen may actually not.
With respect to the "house edge" definition, I don't think I can do much better than grab a wikipedia definition, and you've already done that from the looks of things. I make it a point to avoid gambling -- except for the occasional poker game when I pay a small fixed stake and view it as buying an evening's entertainment -- and so don't really follow gambling terminology. Until a couple of days ago I didn't know what an "each way" bet was, for example.
I can help on the maths of probability, but not on "in-house" terms, I'm afraid.
Not really true, because chance is about telling you what to expect -- and, on top of proven rules such as the Law of Large Numbers, tells you what is almost certain to happen. And it is part of the law, of course, that what is almost certain to happen may actually not.
With respect to the "house edge" definition, I don't think I can do much better than grab a wikipedia definition, and you've already done that from the looks of things. I make it a point to avoid gambling -- except for the occasional poker game when I pay a small fixed stake and view it as buying an evening's entertainment -- and so don't really follow gambling terminology. Until a couple of days ago I didn't know what an "each way" bet was, for example.
I can help on the maths of probability, but not on "in-house" terms, I'm afraid.