Memes
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@no-quarter said in Memes:
Pedant here and I am in a particularly shitty mood. Not a fact.
Mutually exclusive events. Could spin that 100 times and never get shot. All things being equal with mass of bullet etc.
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@no-quarter said in Memes:
Pedant here and I am in a particularly shitty mood. Not a fact.
Mutually exclusive events. Could spin that 100 times and never get shot. All things being equal with mass of bullet etc.
Try telling Robert De Niro and Christopher Walken that
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@no-quarter said in Memes:
Pedant here and I am in a particularly shitty mood. Not a fact.
Mutually exclusive events. Could spin that 100 times and never get shot. All things being equal with mass of bullet etc.
Try telling Robert De Niro and Christopher Walken that
Love that scene, but I'm still right.
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@no-quarter said in Memes:
Pedant here and I am in a particularly shitty mood. Not a fact.
Mutually exclusive events. Could spin that 100 times and never get shot. All things being equal with mass of bullet etc.
but thats based on spinning it each time, when ive seen it in movies they normally just pull the trigger 6 times in a row so each person has increasing odds of getting it
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@kiwiwomble said in Memes:
@no-quarter said in Memes:
Pedant here and I am in a particularly shitty mood. Not a fact.
Mutually exclusive events. Could spin that 100 times and never get shot. All things being equal with mass of bullet etc.
but thats based on spinning it each time, when ive seen it in movies they normally just pull the trigger 6 times in a row so each person has increasing odds of getting it
I believe that it is spun each time which is why it a game of chance, otherwise you have six players and if it doesn't go off, the last one knows that he is going to die.
Probability
The game is commonly associated with six-shot revolvers. In this case, mathematically, the average number of consecutive pulls of the trigger before the gun discharges is 3.5. If the cylinder is re-spun after each trigger pull, the probability of firing remains 1 in 6 on each occasion, and the probability of it having fired after six pulls is {\displaystyle 1-({\tfrac {5}{6}})^{6}}{\displaystyle 1-({\tfrac {5}{6}})^{6}}, or about 66.5%. If instead the gun is only spun once at the start of the game rather than repeating after each trigger pull, the probability of it firing is 1⁄6, followed by 1⁄5 on the second pull, 1⁄4 on the third pull and so on, until if it fails to fire 5 times, the probability is 1⁄1 (=1) on the final pull.[4] -
@kiwiwomble said in Memes:
@no-quarter said in Memes:
Pedant here and I am in a particularly shitty mood. Not a fact.
Mutually exclusive events. Could spin that 100 times and never get shot. All things being equal with mass of bullet etc.
but thats based on spinning it each time, when ive seen it in movies they normally just pull the trigger 6 times in a row so each person has increasing odds of getting it
I believe that it is spun each time which is why it a game of chance, otherwise you have six players and if it doesn't go off, the last one knows that he is going to die.
Probability
The game is commonly associated with six-shot revolvers. In this case, mathematically, the average number of consecutive pulls of the trigger before the gun discharges is 3.5. If the cylinder is re-spun after each trigger pull, the probability of firing remains 1 in 6 on each occasion, and the probability of it having fired after six pulls is {\displaystyle 1-({\tfrac {5}{6}})^{6}}{\displaystyle 1-({\tfrac {5}{6}})^{6}}, or about 66.5%. If instead the gun is only spun once at the start of the game rather than repeating after each trigger pull, the probability of it firing is 1⁄6, followed by 1⁄5 on the second pull, 1⁄4 on the third pull and so on, until if it fails to fire 5 times, the probability is 1⁄1 (=1) on the final pull.[4]Jesus, I really think you need lockdown to end if you’re analysing a meme this much.