Accountancy, asked by ishikag70, 4 months ago

Two events are said to be independent if
1. Occurence of one prevents
occurence of other
2. Ocurence or non-occurence of
on affect occurence of other
event
3 both of them always occur
together
only one of themncan occur at a
time​

Answers

Answered by akash2952003
0

Answer:

In probability two events are said to be independent if the occurrence of one event is not affected by the occurrence of another event. Both the variable are completely independent of each other. These events are also known as mutually exclusive event.

Answered By

Answered by shibanichand07
3

Answer:

ans is 1

Explanation:

  • Two events A and B are said to be independent if the fact that one event has occurred does not affect the probability that the other event will occur.

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