Examples of candi in the following topics:
-
Types of Examples: Brief, Extended, and Hypothetical
- This could be a story about a girl, Annie, picking 10 pieces of candy from a bag of 50 pieces of candy in which half are blue and half are red and then determining Annie's probability of pulling out 10 total pieces of red candy.
-
Permutations and Combinations
- Suppose you had a plate with three pieces of candy on it: one green, one yellow, and one red.
- This means that if there were 5 pieces of candy to be picked up, they could be picked up in any of 5!
- Suppose that there were four pieces of candy (red, yellow, green, and brown) and you were only going to pick up exactly two pieces.
- Now suppose that you were not concerned with the way the pieces of candy were chosen but only in the final choices.
-
Countertrade
- Offset agreement: Party A and Country B enter a contract where Party A agrees to buy sugar from Country B to manufacture candy.
- Country B then buys that candy.
-
Hypergeometric (optional)
- A candy dish contains 100 jelly beans and 80 gumdrops.
- Fifty candies are picked at random.
-
Lab: Hypothesis Testing for Two Means and Two Proportions
- Test whether or not the mean number of candy pieces per package is the same for the two brands.
-
Channel Member Characteristics
- Candy uses an intensive distribution channel, meaning it is widely available at a low cost.
-
Chapter Summary
- A Candy Store Company with subsidiaries in New York and other large cities in US was interested in opening a store in Monterrey, Mexico.
- It is housed on three floors, a huge locale focused on selling all type of candies.
- Every floor has a thematic decoration, characters, and games, depending on the type of candies sold on that floor.
- Additional to the thematic areas defined in the New York store, this store will have a space for "old candy brands" to attract older consumers.
-
Data basics exercises
- They were also presented with a jar of individually wrapped candies and informed that they were for children in a nearby laboratory, but that they could take some if they wanted.
- Participants completed unrelated tasks and then reported the number of candies they had taken.
- It was found that those in the upper-class rank condition took more candy than did those in the lower-rank condition.
-
Two basic relationship types
- The buyer must purchase snacks, candy, meat, and drinks, just to name a few.
-
Product categories
- Examples here include: soft drinks, cigarettes, fast foods, newspapers, public transportation and candy bars.