Testing random
sohcahtoa82 at gmail.com
sohcahtoa82 at gmail.com
Tue Jun 16 18:30:29 EDT 2015
On Tuesday, June 16, 2015 at 3:01:06 PM UTC-7, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn wrote:
> Ned Batchelder wrote:
>
> > [...]
> > This is done empirically, by producing `nseq` sequences of
> > `nrolls` rolls of the die. Each sequence is examined to
> > see if it has a zero. The total number of no-zero
> > sequences divided `nseq` is the probability.
>
> No, it is not. It is the relative frequency for *this* number of trials and
> *this* run of the experiment.
>
> > """
> > no_zeros = 0
> > for _ in xrange(nseq):
> > seq = die_rolls(nrolls)
> > if not any_zeros(seq):
> > no_zeros += 1
> > return float(no_zeros)/nseq
> >
> > for n in range(10, 101, 10):
> > # Calculate the probability of getting no zeros by trying
> > # it a million times.
> > prob = probability_of_no_zero(n, 1000000)
> > print "n = {:3d}, P(no zero) = {:.8f}".format(n, prob)
> >
> >
> >
> > Running this gives:
> >
> > $ pypy testrandom.py
> > n = 10, P(no zero) = 0.34867300
> > n = 20, P(no zero) = 0.12121900
> > n = 30, P(no zero) = 0.04267000
> > n = 40, P(no zero) = 0.01476600
> > n = 50, P(no zero) = 0.00519900
> > n = 60, P(no zero) = 0.00174100
> > n = 70, P(no zero) = 0.00061600
> > n = 80, P(no zero) = 0.00020600
> > n = 90, P(no zero) = 0.00006300
> > n = 100, P(no zero) = 0.00002400
> >
> >
> > As n increases, the probability of having no zeros goes down.
>
> Your programmatic "proof", as all the other intuitive-empirical "proofs",
> and all the other counter-arguments posted before in this thread, is flawed.
> As others have pointed out at the beginning of this thread, you *cannot*
> measure or calculate probability or determine randomness programmatically
> (at least not with this program). I repeat: Probability is what relative
> frequency (which you can measure) *approaches* for *large* numbers. 100 is
> anything but large, to begin with. What is "large" depends on the
> experiment, not on the experimentator. And with independent events, the
> probability for getting zero does not increase because you have been getting
> non-zeros before. It simply does not work this way.
Nobody is arguing that. You're arguing against something that nobody is suggesting.
>
> If you had read the article I referred you to, you would have known that
> this approach, this program, is bogus. I see no logic to continue here as
> long as you do not realize and recognize the Gambler's fallacy on which all
> arguments presented so far, including yours, are based. I would only be
> wasting more precious free time by repeating myself in one way or another.
If the odds of getting a 0 is 1 out of 10, then the odds of NOT getting a zero is 9/10. Which means the odds of picking 10 numbers and not getting ANY zeroes is (9/10)^10, which is approximately 0.35. This has NOTHING to do with the Gambler's Fallacy.
>
> This should give you pause: In real mathematics, events with zero
> probability can occur.
Nobody will disagree with that. The probability of me winning the lottery is zero if I don't buy a ticket.
>
> --
> PointedEars
>
> Twitter: @PointedEars2
> Please do not cc me. / Bitte keine Kopien per E-Mail.
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