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A quality inspector examines a sample of 40 strings of lights and finds that 4 are defective. What is the relative frequency of a string of lights being defective? Round your answer to 2 decimal places, if necessary.

User Heera
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1 Answer

17 votes
17 votes

Solution

- The formula for the relative frequency is given below:


\begin{gathered} rf=(f)/(n) \\ where, \\ f=\text{ The number of times the data occurred in an observation} \\ n=\text{ Total frequencies} \end{gathered}

- We have been given 4 defective lights and 40 total lights in the sample.

- Thus, we can find the relative frequency of a string of lights being defective:


\begin{gathered} f=4,n=40 \\ \\ rf=(4)/(40)=(1)/(10)=0.10\text{ \lparen To 2 decimal places\rparen} \end{gathered}

User Yoam Farges
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2.7k points
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