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Dice


 

A die (Old French de, from Latin datum "something given or played" http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/die_2?view=uk) is a small polyhedral object (usually a cube) suitable as a gambling device (especially for craps or sic bo).

Ordinary dice

The most common dice are small cubes 1 to 2 cm along an edge, whose faces are numbered from one to six (usually by patterns of dots called pips). It is traditional to assign pairs of numbers that total seven to opposite faces; this implies that at one vertex the faces 1, 2 and 3 intersect. It leaves one other abstract design choice: the faces representing 1, 2 and 3 respectively can be placed in either clockwise or anti-clockwise order about this vertex.

Related Topics:
Cube - Clockwise or anti-clockwise

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Dice are thrown to provide (supposedly uniformly distributed) random numbers for gambling and other games and thus are a type of hardware random number generator. However, because the numbers on toy dice are marked with small indentations, slightly more material is removed from the higher numbered faces. This results in a small bias, and they do not provide fair (uniform) random numbers. Casino dice have markings that are flush with the surface and come very close to providing true uniformly distributed random numbers.

Related Topics:
Uniformly distributed - Random - Gambling - Game - Hardware random number generator

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Dice are thrown, singly or in groups, from the hand or from a cup or box designed for the purpose, onto a flat surface.

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The face of each die that is uppermost when it comes to rest provides the value of the throw. A typical dice game today is craps, wherein two dice are thrown at a time, and wagers are made on the total value of up-facing spots on the two dice. They are also frequently used to randomize allowable moves in board games such as Backgammon.

Related Topics:
Dice game - Craps - Board game - Backgammon

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Probability

For a single roll, the probability of rolling each value, 1 through 6, is exactly 1 in 6. For a double roll, however, the total of both rolls is not evenly distributed, but is distributed in a triangular curve, as follows:

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TOTAL PROBABILITY

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