Originally posted by: Crescent13
Oh come on even I can solve that and I'm in 10th grade. I have enough homework to do no way am I doing yours too.
Originally posted by: Glavinsolo
Originally posted by: Crescent13
Oh come on even I can solve that and I'm in 10th grade. I have enough homework to do no way am I doing yours too.
What high school do you go to that has probability w/ calc doing double integrals?
I think the setup looks like this: I(X;Y)=integral(X)integral(Y) p(x,y)log (p(x,y))/(p(x)p(y))dxdy
Originally posted by: Glavinsolo
Originally posted by: Crescent13
Oh come on even I can solve that and I'm in 10th grade. I have enough homework to do no way am I doing yours too.
What high school do you go to that has probability w/ calc doing double integrals?
I think the setup looks like this: I(X;Y)=integral(X)integral(Y) p(x,y)log (p(x,y))/(p(x)p(y))dxdy
Originally posted by: Crescent13
Oh come on even I can solve that and I'm in 10th grade. I have enough homework to do no way am I doing yours too.
Originally posted by: ArchCenturion
Jacobian. Its been awhile since Ive heard that term. Multivariable calc right? Seems like you could just Google Jacobian for the solution technique.
Hahaha, stupid grom.Originally posted by: sinucus
Originally posted by: Glavinsolo
Originally posted by: Crescent13
Oh come on even I can solve that and I'm in 10th grade. I have enough homework to do no way am I doing yours too.
What high school do you go to that has probability w/ calc doing double integrals?
I think the setup looks like this: I(X;Y)=integral(X)integral(Y) p(x,y)log (p(x,y))/(p(x)p(y))dxdy
I think that qualifies as p0wned!