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A local country club has a membership of 600 and operates facilities that include an 18-hole championship golf course and 12 tennis courts. Before deciding whether to accept new members, the club president would like to know how many members use each facility. A survey of the membership indicates that 75% use the golf course, 50% use the tennis courts, and 5% use neither of these facilities. One club member is chosen at random. What is the probability that the member uses the golf course but not the tennis courts

User Adam Musch
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1 Answer

12 votes

Answer:

0.45 = 45% probability that the member uses the golf course but not the tennis courts

Explanation:

I am going to solve this question using the events as Venn sets.

I am going to say that:

Event A: Uses the golf courses.

Event B: Uses the tennis courts.

5% use neither of these facilities.

This means that
P(A \cup B) = 1 - 0.05 = 0.95

75% use the golf course, 50% use the tennis courts

This means, respectively, by:


P(A) = 0.75, P(B) = 0.5

Probability that a member uses both:

This is
P(A \cap B). We have that:


P(A \cap B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A \cup B)

So


P(A \cap B) = 0.75 + 0.5 - 0.95 = 0.3

What is the probability that the member uses the golf course but not the tennis courts?

This is
P(A - B), which is given by:


P(A - B) = P(A) - P(A \cap B)

So


P(A - B) = 0.75 - 0.3 = 0.45

0.45 = 45% probability that the member uses the golf course but not the tennis courts

User Cookiemonster
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