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in reply to Re: Birthday Chances
in thread Birthday Chances

Well if you just use the idea that choosing 2 people out of a group has a certain number of possibilities, it would stand to reason when the possibilities get larger than 366, you are probably going to have two people with the same birthday. If you choose two people out of a group of 28 people, there are 378 ways to do this without repeats! That makes the odds pretty good that two of them with have the same birthday.

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Re^3: Birthday Chances
by morgon (Priest) on Jul 29, 2010 at 23:14 UTC
    it would stand to reason when the possibilities get larger than 366, you are probably going to have two people with the same birthday

    Not probably but definitely.

    If you have a group of 366 (or more) people you always have 2 people that share the same birthday (assuming a non-leap year).

    This reasoning is called "pigeonhole principle".