Theroretical percentage overlap












0












$begingroup$


I've spent a long time searching but cant find any information. I'm probably searching the wrong terms.



Example:
If 50% of chairs are red, and 25% of chairs are tall. What percentage of chairs are both red and tall.



I'd like to be able to do this for n variables.



Example:
3% of chairs have three legs. How many chairs are red, tall and three legged?



I know this would just be theoretical but let's assume a completely random distribution of traits.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't think that "theoretical percentage" is at all the right term (that seems closer to theoretical yield from other sciences). And the issue is that we don't have enough information. In the first, it's possible that the only tall chairs are red ($25%$) would be the answer), and it's possible that the only tall chairs are, e.g. blue ($0%$ would be the answer). Or any value in-between depending. A similar thing holds for the second example.
    $endgroup$
    – Eevee Trainer
    Jan 5 at 0:29


















0












$begingroup$


I've spent a long time searching but cant find any information. I'm probably searching the wrong terms.



Example:
If 50% of chairs are red, and 25% of chairs are tall. What percentage of chairs are both red and tall.



I'd like to be able to do this for n variables.



Example:
3% of chairs have three legs. How many chairs are red, tall and three legged?



I know this would just be theoretical but let's assume a completely random distribution of traits.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    I don't think that "theoretical percentage" is at all the right term (that seems closer to theoretical yield from other sciences). And the issue is that we don't have enough information. In the first, it's possible that the only tall chairs are red ($25%$) would be the answer), and it's possible that the only tall chairs are, e.g. blue ($0%$ would be the answer). Or any value in-between depending. A similar thing holds for the second example.
    $endgroup$
    – Eevee Trainer
    Jan 5 at 0:29
















0












0








0





$begingroup$


I've spent a long time searching but cant find any information. I'm probably searching the wrong terms.



Example:
If 50% of chairs are red, and 25% of chairs are tall. What percentage of chairs are both red and tall.



I'd like to be able to do this for n variables.



Example:
3% of chairs have three legs. How many chairs are red, tall and three legged?



I know this would just be theoretical but let's assume a completely random distribution of traits.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




I've spent a long time searching but cant find any information. I'm probably searching the wrong terms.



Example:
If 50% of chairs are red, and 25% of chairs are tall. What percentage of chairs are both red and tall.



I'd like to be able to do this for n variables.



Example:
3% of chairs have three legs. How many chairs are red, tall and three legged?



I know this would just be theoretical but let's assume a completely random distribution of traits.







probability statistics percentages






share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question











share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked Jan 5 at 0:20









ArkyrisArkyris

1




1












  • $begingroup$
    I don't think that "theoretical percentage" is at all the right term (that seems closer to theoretical yield from other sciences). And the issue is that we don't have enough information. In the first, it's possible that the only tall chairs are red ($25%$) would be the answer), and it's possible that the only tall chairs are, e.g. blue ($0%$ would be the answer). Or any value in-between depending. A similar thing holds for the second example.
    $endgroup$
    – Eevee Trainer
    Jan 5 at 0:29




















  • $begingroup$
    I don't think that "theoretical percentage" is at all the right term (that seems closer to theoretical yield from other sciences). And the issue is that we don't have enough information. In the first, it's possible that the only tall chairs are red ($25%$) would be the answer), and it's possible that the only tall chairs are, e.g. blue ($0%$ would be the answer). Or any value in-between depending. A similar thing holds for the second example.
    $endgroup$
    – Eevee Trainer
    Jan 5 at 0:29


















$begingroup$
I don't think that "theoretical percentage" is at all the right term (that seems closer to theoretical yield from other sciences). And the issue is that we don't have enough information. In the first, it's possible that the only tall chairs are red ($25%$) would be the answer), and it's possible that the only tall chairs are, e.g. blue ($0%$ would be the answer). Or any value in-between depending. A similar thing holds for the second example.
$endgroup$
– Eevee Trainer
Jan 5 at 0:29






$begingroup$
I don't think that "theoretical percentage" is at all the right term (that seems closer to theoretical yield from other sciences). And the issue is that we don't have enough information. In the first, it's possible that the only tall chairs are red ($25%$) would be the answer), and it's possible that the only tall chairs are, e.g. blue ($0%$ would be the answer). Or any value in-between depending. A similar thing holds for the second example.
$endgroup$
– Eevee Trainer
Jan 5 at 0:29












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2












$begingroup$

In general it is impossible to say, but if they are completely randomly distributed and independent qualities as you say than it is just the product of the probabilities. For example, if $frac12$ of chairs are red and $frac14$ are tall, we expect $frac14$ of the red chairs to be tall as well. So $frac18$ of all the chairs should be red and tall. And $3%$ of those should have $3$ legs, so $frac3{800}$ of all the chairs should have all these properties.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkyris
    Jan 5 at 0:39












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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

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$begingroup$

In general it is impossible to say, but if they are completely randomly distributed and independent qualities as you say than it is just the product of the probabilities. For example, if $frac12$ of chairs are red and $frac14$ are tall, we expect $frac14$ of the red chairs to be tall as well. So $frac18$ of all the chairs should be red and tall. And $3%$ of those should have $3$ legs, so $frac3{800}$ of all the chairs should have all these properties.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkyris
    Jan 5 at 0:39
















2












$begingroup$

In general it is impossible to say, but if they are completely randomly distributed and independent qualities as you say than it is just the product of the probabilities. For example, if $frac12$ of chairs are red and $frac14$ are tall, we expect $frac14$ of the red chairs to be tall as well. So $frac18$ of all the chairs should be red and tall. And $3%$ of those should have $3$ legs, so $frac3{800}$ of all the chairs should have all these properties.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkyris
    Jan 5 at 0:39














2












2








2





$begingroup$

In general it is impossible to say, but if they are completely randomly distributed and independent qualities as you say than it is just the product of the probabilities. For example, if $frac12$ of chairs are red and $frac14$ are tall, we expect $frac14$ of the red chairs to be tall as well. So $frac18$ of all the chairs should be red and tall. And $3%$ of those should have $3$ legs, so $frac3{800}$ of all the chairs should have all these properties.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$



In general it is impossible to say, but if they are completely randomly distributed and independent qualities as you say than it is just the product of the probabilities. For example, if $frac12$ of chairs are red and $frac14$ are tall, we expect $frac14$ of the red chairs to be tall as well. So $frac18$ of all the chairs should be red and tall. And $3%$ of those should have $3$ legs, so $frac3{800}$ of all the chairs should have all these properties.







share|cite|improve this answer












share|cite|improve this answer



share|cite|improve this answer










answered Jan 5 at 0:30









Erik ParkinsonErik Parkinson

1,17519




1,17519












  • $begingroup$
    That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkyris
    Jan 5 at 0:39


















  • $begingroup$
    That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
    $endgroup$
    – Arkyris
    Jan 5 at 0:39
















$begingroup$
That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
$endgroup$
– Arkyris
Jan 5 at 0:39




$begingroup$
That makes sense. Thank you! I don't know why this was eluding me.
$endgroup$
– Arkyris
Jan 5 at 0:39


















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