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Texas pick 3 probability question
sorry, forgot to remove redundant duplicates. given 0123456789XY as the basic form, where XY is any repeating digit, there are 6,187,104,000 possible permutations. this would give a lottery odds of 1 in (1,000,000,000,000 / 6,187,104,000) or 1 in 161.626505713. this event should happen on average once every 161.626505713 draw days. Good Luck
Jan 10, 2020, 9:09 pm - JADELottery - Mathematics Forum

What do you use for statistical analysis?
Using Lottery Post's Deflate 3 and filtering for any straight combination containing 0,4,5,9 shows that there are 784 combinations or 78.4% chance of event happening on any particular draw. I agree that in the in the short term there will be variance but over a statistically significant number of draws on a non-bias lottery machine it will approach the number stated. 784 Combinations Ham n Cheese! Jimmy
Dec 30, 2015, 9:58 pm - jimjwright - Mathematics Forum

Odds of winning.
Each draw is an absolute event , reliant on no other influences from the past. You're not the first to say it and certainly won't be the last and I won't be the first or last to say at least one of the digits in the last pick-3 drawing has a 65.7% chance of repeating. Somebody else won't be the first or last saying any three digits have a 65.7% chance. Here's your chance to be the first to tell us which three out of the other seven digits has the same chance. It doesn't matter which three y
Aug 16, 2013, 12:32 am - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

Math or Data help please
The Draw Difference distribution is related to the Potential Reoccurrence Probability. The basic equation is y = e-(Δd / ). This shows the draw relative probability of the event reoccurring again. For the Doubles, we can see the probability of a Double happening again is pretty high just after is has happened and begins to dimish as more draws go by. About 48% of all doubles will reoccur within the next 3 draws. Continues...
May 1, 2013, 3:40 pm - JADELottery - Mathematics Forum

Mathematics and the Lottery
Hello, braker, good trablho, lotteries are random, but the frequency of repetitions in certain positions shows the factor of probability. That is the repetition of an event is the secret of probabilities. But we have another factor that can predict lottery only mathematically by 100% in 60 or 70% of a bet, each lottery has its characteristic repeats (intervals) the problem and see the patterns in the matrix blank. For the prediction would have to be even more play in a lottery, a lottery example
Oct 19, 2011, 11:25 am - dr san - Mathematics Forum

Of Cat Washing and Backtesting
Stack47, I think you need to put on your critical thinking cap and read the rules again, slowly. --Jimmy4164 (From Bluejay's Rules:) Length. Each simulation will run for 200,000 rounds. A round is an event where any bet is resolved. It's fine for your system to sit out sometimes to wait for streaks or other conditions, but 200,000 rounds must be wagered on (unless you go bust first). We'll run this simulation 20 times, and you win the challenge if your system wins at least 11 out of
May 20, 2011, 5:01 pm - jimmy4164 - Mathematics Forum

Interest In Backtesting and Simulating Lottery Systems
Ok Jimmy, then you might consider developing a system or a 50/50 sitema To predict that half the numbers are going to repeat, or sequences of patterns to peers who have Possibility of repeating, as the repetition of an event is the likely secret, a lottery example of 49 / 6, try to see the repetition of pairs and triplets, rather than provide numbers Randomly, and the other 50% (system 2) to see for three types of output frequencies, hot, cold and m dios.em NUMC game we can provide 100%, r
May 6, 2011, 8:00 am - dr san - Mathematics Forum

Statistics around the balance of even/odd and small/big numbers
ps Nothing is truly random. A computer draw or RNG is a artifical attempt at random. How sufficiently random an event is, is a matter of observation. RL
Feb 15, 2011, 9:59 pm - RL-RANDOMLOGIC - Mathematics Forum

HELP! Macro to eliminate 5 match numbers
According to my Classic Lotto statistics four numbers from the previous drawing have never been drawn so you could safely say it's highly unlikely any combination using four of those numbers will be drawn in the next drawing. Three numbers only repeated 10 times out of the 573 drawings I tested so a 1.7% chance is unlikely too. Four numbers from the previous two drawings are at a 1.9% chance too. Six numbers from the previous 4 drawings have only hit twice and five numbers were drawn 16 or 2.8%.
Nov 1, 2010, 6:56 pm - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

One way or another
I found they do have a disclaimer for your lottery: On the prize breakdown pages Depending on the number of winners overall and per prize category, prizes may on occasion be less than stated above. Rather than limit the number of bets on a single number like for most games here, they simply shaft the winners when it suits them. So, in the event they slip up and let that many people play the same number and win a very large prize category, they will have some very disappointed winners. Par
Mar 10, 2009, 5:22 am - time*treat - Mathematics Forum