how can I use matlab to solve this probability problem?
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    chafah zachary
 il 24 Mar 2014
  
    
    
    
    
    Commentato: Star Strider
      
      
 il 25 Mar 2014
            Consider a binary code with 6 bits (0 or 1) in each code word.
(a) How many code words have exactly three successive 0’s? (b) What is the probability of the code word 000111?
I tried using matlab to no avail.
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  Star Strider
      
      
 il 25 Mar 2014
        I guess I’m revealing my intellectual ineptitude for all to see, but I actually wrote a short routine to explore that.
First, the probability of 000111 is 1/64. That is obvious.
Allowing for repeated occurrences, so that 0000 would count as two occurrences for instance, this codelet surprised me with the result (length(z)):
for k1 = 1:64
    q(k1,:) = dec2bin(k1-1,6);
    z3{k1} = strfind(q(k1,:),'000');
end
z = find(cell2mat(z3));
I wouldn’t mind an analytical proof of this. It’s not obvious to me.
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  Roger Stafford
      
      
 il 25 Mar 2014
				The request stated "How many code words have exactly three successive 0’s?" It doesn't say, "how many have just three zeros and these must be successive." I see precisely twelve different six-bit words that have exactly three successive zeros, regardless of whether there might be other zeros:
 000100
 000101
 000110
 000111
 001000
 010001
 011000
 100010
 100011
 101000
 111000
 110001
However Chafah is the final arbiter of what was meant in the request.
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  Roger Stafford
      
      
 il 24 Mar 2014
        That's the kind of problem that can be solved mentally faster than a program can be written to do it. So why bother using matlab?
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