The Monty Hall Problem
One of my friends here in Australia left ‘The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time’ at our house. So I started to read it and have finished reading it and it is excellent!
Anyway there’s a point in the book where they talk about The Monty Hall Problem (see the link for information), my flat mate Andy does not believe changing matters. So I have written a little program in C# .NET that tries to prove The Monty Hall Problem. Here it is, although the results really seem to prove absolutely nothing –
Random r=new Random(); bool change=true; int correctChange=0; int correctNoChange=0; int maxLoop=100000000; for(int x=0;x<maxLoop;x++) { int correctAnswer=r.Next(3); int guess=r.Next(3); int showDoor=0; showDoor=correctAnswer%2 + 1; correctNoChange+=(guess==correctAnswer)?1:0; guess=((showDoor+correctAnswer)%2)+1; correctChange+=(guess==correctAnswer)?1:0; }
I ran this 10,000,000,000 times and the difference on changing was 161026.