Caitlin Callahan left the meeting Chat from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: yes15:04 from W Randolph Franklin to Everyone: can u hear me?15:04 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: yes15:04 from John Massay to Everyone: Yup15:04 from Ethan Bly to Everyone: yes15:04 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: what distro are you using?15:04 from W Randolph Franklin to Everyone: ubuntu 20.1015:05 from Ziqiao Fang to Everyone: wow15:06 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: yeah right15:06 from Chris Snyder to Everyone: we can see its all good15:07 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: is the space already there in webex?15:08 from Ziqiao Fang to Everyone: Can you make the webcam window bigger?15:09 from Mohammad Iqbal to Everyone: ^15:10 from Nicholas White to Everyone: ^^15:10 from Tristan Laurian to Everyone: ^^15:10 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: ^^^15:11 from Michael Awad to Everyone: thats better15:11 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: that was a homework question, do you mind going over it?15:22 multinomial distribution15:22 thank you15:25 this makes so much more sense now i get it15:30 from Mohammad Iqbal to Everyone: how do u get the bottom bart of the fraction again?15:33 from Nicholas White to Everyone: wouldnt it be over 4! 3! 2!15:33 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: yeah i was thinking that15:33 doesnt' it have to add up to 915:34 from Mohammad Iqbal to Everyone: yes15:35 from Matt Paoli to Everyone: what's p in (1-p)?15:42 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: more precisily getting not heads15:43 from Bate Egbe to Everyone: so this is when it is an unfari coing right15:43 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: yes15:43 you could use this for fair coins but the probabilites would be 1/2 1/215:45 so it would be pointless15:45 from Chris Snyder to Everyone: diamonds15:54 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: which is why you divide by aall the possible permutations of that one set aka n!16:02 there are 2 elements in each set which means you can arange them 2! ways, ie divide by 2!16:05 besically n! / (n-k)! is a way to write n! that stops at a circuit point i.e instead of 5*4*3*2*1 it does 5*4*316:08 5!/2!16:08 just makes the writing easier16:08 from Nicholas White to Everyone: what is going on with homework 3?16:12 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: i like that a lot more16:12 from Curtis Basa to Everyone: So partial credit will no longer be a thing with homeworks?16:12 from Nicholas White to Everyone: yeah that seems a lot better. When will it get posted?16:12 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: homework 3 is already up16:13 and homework 4 too16:13 from W Randolph Franklin to Everyone: see you thurs16:15 from Curtis Basa to Everyone: Thank you16:15 from Aidan Hanna to Everyone: Thank you16:15 from Dan Farkash to Everyone: thank you16:15 from Nicholas White to Everyone: Thank you!16:15 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: oh ho do you do question 616:16 from W Randolph Franklin to Everyone: question 6 will be deleted16:21 from Andrew Salinas to Everyone: i don't understand why you divide by 7^2116:22 after 21!/(3!)^716:22 ohhhh makes sense16:23 thanks16:23 from John Massay to Everyone: If we already completed question 6 of the homework, will there be any points awarded for correctly doing it?16:24 Send to: Everyone