00:01
Looks like we're looking at the different events here.
00:05
We have flipping a coin, rolling a dye, and spinning a spinner.
00:10
And so our outcomes are the ways that this can come out, and we can either get a heads or a tail.
00:19
And then the sample space is a set, and we would list down what those outcomes are.
00:26
Now, we can short cut it and just put h for heads and t for tails.
00:31
But we don't list them and repeat.
00:33
If there were, say, a coin had for some weird reason had three sides and there were two heads and a tail, we would only this head and tail, only the separate outcomes, not repeat.
00:44
Now, an event is what could happen.
00:47
And you have the event being getting a heads.
00:51
And so the event for our setting is equal to just the set of h.
01:01
And the number of possible outcomes for the sample space, so the number of outcomes in the sample space is there are two.
01:13
Now, the outcomes, when we roll a dye, on the other hand, we'll use a regular die.
01:19
It could be a one, a two, a three, a four, a five, or a six.
01:23
So when we listed as a sample set, we listed as usually you put them in order.
01:32
And that event could be a number of things.
01:34
And you have an example of an event being that it's an even number...