complementary events - определение. Что такое complementary events
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Что (кто) такое complementary events - определение

OPPOSITE OF A PROBABILITY EVENT
Complementary events

cDNA         
  • microarray]] used in testing
DINGLE-STRANDED COMPLEMENTARY DNA SYNTHESIZED FROM AN RNA TEMPLATE
CDNA; Complementary dna; CDNAs; Cdna; Complimentary dna; Complementary nucleotide; DNA, complementary
¦ abbreviation complementary DNA.
complementary DNA         
  • microarray]] used in testing
DINGLE-STRANDED COMPLEMENTARY DNA SYNTHESIZED FROM AN RNA TEMPLATE
CDNA; Complementary dna; CDNAs; Cdna; Complimentary dna; Complementary nucleotide; DNA, complementary
¦ noun synthetic DNA in which the sequence of bases is complementary to that of a given sequence of messenger RNA.
Apple event         
MESSAGE-BASED INTERPROCESS COMMUNICATION MECHANISM IN MAC OS, FIRST MAKING AN APPEARANCE IN SYSTEM 7 AND SUPPORTED BY EVERY VERSION OF THE CLASSIC MAC OS SINCE THEN AND BY MACOS
AppleEvent Object Model; AppleEventObjectModel; AppleEvents; Apple Events; AppleEvent; Apple Event; Scripting Bridge; Apple events; Aete
Apple events are the message-based interprocess communication mechanism in Mac OS, first making an appearance in System 7 and supported by every version of the classic Mac OS since then and by macOS. Apple events describe "high-level" events such as "open document" or "print file", whereas earlier OSs had supported much more basic events, namely "click" and "keypress".

Википедия

Complementary event

In probability theory, the complement of any event A is the event [not A], i.e. the event that A does not occur. The event A and its complement [not A] are mutually exclusive and exhaustive. Generally, there is only one event B such that A and B are both mutually exclusive and exhaustive; that event is the complement of A. The complement of an event A is usually denoted as A′, Ac, ¬ {\displaystyle \neg } A or A. Given an event, the event and its complementary event define a Bernoulli trial: did the event occur or not?

For example, if a typical coin is tossed and one assumes that it cannot land on its edge, then it can either land showing "heads" or "tails." Because these two outcomes are mutually exclusive (i.e. the coin cannot simultaneously show both heads and tails) and collectively exhaustive (i.e. there are no other possible outcomes not represented between these two), they are therefore each other's complements. This means that [heads] is logically equivalent to [not tails], and [tails] is equivalent to [not heads].