So I have this problem, I did it like this,
In a warehouse there are 10 radios of which 4 are defective, 7 televisions of which 3 are defective. 3 items are selected and they are found to be defective. What is the probability that 1 is a radio and 2 are televisions?
A = three defective items are selected.
B = 1 radio and 2 televisions are selected
They ask for: [MATH]P(B|A)=\dfrac{P(A\cap B)}{P(A)}[/MATH]
The probability of A is the probability of selecting 3 defective objects out of 17 of which 7 are defective.
P(A)= [MATH]P(A)=\dfrac{\displaystyle\binom{7}{3}}{\displaystyle\binom{17}{3}} [/MATH]
The [MATH]P(A\cap B)[/MATH] is the probability of choosing two defective televisions and one defective radio:
[MATH] P(A\cap B)=\dfrac{\displaystyle\binom{10}{1}\binom{7}{2}}{\displaystyle\binom{17}{3}} [/MATH]
Is it ok, can and I do it different?
In a warehouse there are 10 radios of which 4 are defective, 7 televisions of which 3 are defective. 3 items are selected and they are found to be defective. What is the probability that 1 is a radio and 2 are televisions?
A = three defective items are selected.
B = 1 radio and 2 televisions are selected
They ask for: [MATH]P(B|A)=\dfrac{P(A\cap B)}{P(A)}[/MATH]
The probability of A is the probability of selecting 3 defective objects out of 17 of which 7 are defective.
P(A)= [MATH]P(A)=\dfrac{\displaystyle\binom{7}{3}}{\displaystyle\binom{17}{3}} [/MATH]
The [MATH]P(A\cap B)[/MATH] is the probability of choosing two defective televisions and one defective radio:
[MATH] P(A\cap B)=\dfrac{\displaystyle\binom{10}{1}\binom{7}{2}}{\displaystyle\binom{17}{3}} [/MATH]
Is it ok, can and I do it different?