Solve exact, cumulative, and interval probabilities with confidence quickly. Compare expected outcomes and dispersion instantly. Generate charts, exports, and practical sampling insights for decisions.
The graph shows the probability mass for every feasible number of observed successes.
| Scenario | N | K | n | x | Mode | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Defective items in inspection | 50 | 12 | 8 | 3 | Exact | Probability of finding exactly 3 defectives in 8 checked items. |
| Survey support responses | 120 | 44 | 15 | 6 | At least | Probability of observing 6 or more supporters in a sample. |
| Marked cards in a draw | 52 | 4 | 5 | 1 | At most | Probability of drawing no more than 1 marked card. |
| Qualified applicants screened | 80 | 25 | 10 | 2 to 4 | Between | Probability of selecting between 2 and 4 qualified applicants. |
The hypergeometric distribution models the count of successes when you draw from a finite population without replacement.
P(X = x) = [C(K, x) × C(N - K, n - x)] / C(N, n)
Cumulative modes add the exact probabilities across the relevant feasible values of x.
Use it when sampling comes from a finite group without replacement. Each draw changes the remaining composition, so probabilities differ from independent binomial trials.
The binomial model assumes independent trials with constant success probability. The hypergeometric model updates the odds after each draw because sampled items are not replaced.
Population counts, successes, draws, and observed successes represent actual items. Because combinations use discrete counts, the model works only with nonnegative integers.
Exact probability returns the chance of observing one specific success count, such as exactly 3 defectives in a sample of 8 inspected items.
At least sums probabilities from the chosen x upward. At most sums probabilities from the minimum feasible value through the chosen x.
It shows the lowest and highest success counts that can occur with your inputs. Values outside that range always have zero probability.
The mean estimates the expected number of successes. The variance and standard deviation describe how much the observed count tends to vary around that expectation.
Yes. The page includes CSV export for numeric summaries and PDF export for a portable report of the visible results section.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.