Probability from Outcomes

GCSE Probability probability equally likely
\( P(A)=\tfrac{\text{number of favourable outcomes}}{\text{total number of equally likely outcomes}} \)

Statement

The probability of an event is given by:

\[ P(A) = \frac{\text{number of favourable outcomes}}{\text{total number of equally likely outcomes}} \]

Why it’s true

  • Probability is a measure of how likely an event is.
  • If all outcomes are equally likely, the chance of any specific event is the fraction of outcomes in its favour compared to the total outcomes.
  • The probability always lies between 0 and 1.

Recipe (how to use it)

  1. List all possible outcomes (denominator).
  2. Count how many of these outcomes match event A (numerator).
  3. Form the fraction and simplify if needed.

Spotting it

This formula is used in dice, coins, cards, balls from a bag, or any situation where outcomes are equally likely.

Common pairings

  • Complement rule (\(P(A')=1-P(A)\)).
  • Venn diagrams and probability addition rule.
  • Experiments with dice, spinners, or card decks.

Mini examples

  1. Coin flip: Favourable=1 (Heads), Total=2 → \(P(\text{Heads})=1/2\).
  2. Die roll: Favourable=3 (2,4,6), Total=6 → \(P(\text{Even})=3/6=1/2\).

Pitfalls

  • Not all outcomes are equally likely (then formula doesn’t apply directly).
  • Forgetting to count outcomes correctly (e.g., suits in a deck of cards).

Exam strategy

  • Draw the sample space if confused.
  • Always check denominator = total outcomes.
  • Reduce fractions to simplest form.

Summary

The probability of an event = favourable outcomes ÷ total outcomes. It is the foundation of probability theory.