<p>@jarjarbinks23 LOL but my metabolism’s starting to slow down ugh. i used to be able to eat like a pig and not gain squat, but i gained 15 pounds in the last year, and i’m scared i’m going to gain another 15-30 in the next.</p>
<p>Mhm. If this turns out to be a bad scoring test I’ll be taking the ACT. My mom got a 35 back in her day so with her help, the library, and the internet, maybe I’ll do well. Honestly I’m desperate at this point. I want to be debt free in college.</p>
<p>My essay was 1 3/4 pages long but had 3 shoddy, made-up examples because I got the one prompt I wasn’t expecting. I could’ve done the ones that others said they had, but who knows? Maybe I’ll get better than a 6 this time. I got the “Does character determine success.” and made up one about a study, elaborated on a Abraham Lincoln story that has been in my family for years, and then made one up about a serial killer. lol. </p>
<p>@shinchang Something to do with is honesty always good if memory serves me right. I seriously FAILED it, which is annoying bc I’m accustomed to getting perfect 9s on AP prompts as writing is my strength in school</p>
<p>@couga7 aww that stinks. i had the same prompt though. @godsgem322 when in doubt, write about serial killers @personasa ㄴㄱㄴ @jarjarbinks23 haha ikr</p>
<p>The answer to the question I posted about 20 pages ago is :
21/128, it’s not 1/6 as some of you expected.
The solution: Let the probability that the number of heads is 1 be a, 2 be b, 3 be c, 4 be d, 5 be e, 6 be f.
Then, the answer to the original question would be (a+b+c+d+e+f)/6.
a+b+c+d+e+f = 1-1/64 because the number of heads is 0 by a chance of 1/64.
Thus, the answer is (63/64)/6 = 21/128</p>
<p>The question was:
There are 6 coins and a die. If you throw all of them simultaneously, what’s the probability that the number of heads is equal to the number on the die? </p>