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2 September, 07:43

When an event is almost certain to happen, its complement will be an unusual event?

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  1. 2 September, 07:52
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    It is true that the complement will be an unusual event when an event is almost certain to happen. The complement of any event A is the event [not A] in probability theory, i. e. the event that A does not occur.

    An event whose probability is small is called an unusual event. The most commonly used value is 0.05, in other words, an unusual event is a probability less that is than this value, and the cutoff value can be any small value that seems suitable.

    Let’s take this for example:

    It can either land showing "heads" or "tails" if a typical coin is tossed and one assumes that it cannot land on its edge.
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