You roll a die and toss a penny. a. (1, H), (2, H), (3, H), (4, H), (5, H), (6, H), (1, T), (2, T), (3, T), (4, T), (5, T), (6, T) b. (1, H), (2, H), (3, H), (4, H), (5, H), (6, H), (1, H), (2, H), (3, H), (4, H), (5, H), (6, H) c. (1, T), (2, T), (3, T), (4, T), (5, T), (6, T), (1, T), (2, T), (3, T), (4, T), (5, T), (6, T) d. (1, H), (3, H), (5, H), (2, T), (4, T), (6, T)
What is your question?
Phone numbers consist of a three-digit area code followed by seven digits. If the area code must have a 0 or1 for the second digit, and neither the area code nor the seven-digit number can start with 0 or 1, how many different phone numbers are possible? How did you come up with your answer?
sorry haha
that's a different question the one you posted answers for what is its question (die and a coin)
List all the elements of the sample space for the following experiment: You roll a die and toss a penny. a. (1, H), (2, H), (3, H), (4, H), (5, H), (6, H), (1, T), (2, T), (3, T), (4, T), (5, T), (6, T) b. (1, H), (2, H), (3, H), (4, H), (5, H), (6, H), (1, H), (2, H), (3, H), (4, H), (5, H), (6, H) c. (1, T), (2, T), (3, T), (4, T), (5, T), (6, T), (1, T), (2, T), (3, T), (4, T), (5, T), (6, T) d. (1, H), (3, H), (5, H), (2, T), (4, T), (6, T)
so you looking for the sample space:
for a die there 6 possibilities for a coin two possibilities (H or T) so |dw:1435251646210:dw|
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