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A coffee shop recently sold 1010 drinks, including 44 mochas. What is the experimental probability that the next drink sold will be a mocha? Simplify your answer and write it as a fraction or whole number.\newline`P(\text{mocha})` = ______

Full solution

Q. A coffee shop recently sold 1010 drinks, including 44 mochas. What is the experimental probability that the next drink sold will be a mocha? Simplify your answer and write it as a fraction or whole number.\newline`P(\text{mocha})` = ______
  1. Calculate Experimental Probability: The coffee shop sold a total of 1010 drinks, out of which 44 were mochas. To find the experimental probability of the next drink being a mocha, we use the formula P(mocha)=Number of mochas soldTotal drinks soldP(\text{mocha}) = \frac{\text{Number of mochas sold}}{\text{Total drinks sold}}.
  2. Substitute Values: Substitute the given values into the formula: P(mocha)=410P(mocha) = \frac{4}{10}.
  3. Simplify Fraction: Simplify the fraction 410\frac{4}{10} to its simplest form. Both the numerator and the denominator can be divided by 22, which gives us 25\frac{2}{5}.

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