The basic consumer right includes "Right to be informed" that states the availability of information required for weighing alternatives, and protection from false and misleading claims in advertising and labeling practices.
Hence, the sentence "Steven allows customers to look at different products and verify the product details before choosing a product. Steven’s priority is satisfied customers" - justifies the definition of consumer rights.
So, this above sentence highlights the protection of consumer rights.
When looking at probabilities, two ideas are always true.
1) Any probability is more than 0.
2) The sum of all the probabilites is 1.
Idea #2 works here. (For example, think of how a die has six things and the probability of each is 1/6. So 1/6 + 1/6 + 1/6 + 1/6 + 1/6 + 1/6 = 1.) Let G = the probability of grape, C = probability of cherry and O = the probability of orange. From Idea #2, G + C + O = 1. Since we know G and C, then
3/10 + 1/5 + O = 1.
3/10 + 2/10 + O = 1
5/10 + O = 1
O = 5/10
Thus, the probability of an orange jelly bean is 5/10 = 1/2.
P(82 - q < x < 82 + q) = 0.44
P(x < 82 + q) - P(82 - q) = 0.44
P(z < (82 + q - 82)/7.4 - P(z < (82 - q - 82)/7.4) = 0.44
P(z < q/7.4) - P(z < -q/7.4) = 0.44
P(z < q/7.4) - (1 - P(z < q/7.4) = 0.44
P(z < q/7.4) - 1 + P(z < q/7.4) = 0.44
2P(z < q/7.4) - 1 = 0.44
2P(z < q/7.4) = 1.44
P(z < q/7.4) = 0.72
P(z < q/7.4) = P(z < 0.583)
q/7.4 = 0.583
q = 0.583 x 7.4 = 4.31