A?Venn?diagram is a way to illustrate?events?and are particularly useful when?outcomes?overlap
Venn diagrams are mostly used for 2 or 3 events
A Venn diagram consists of a?box?(rectangle) and a?bubble?(circle/ellipse) for each?event
Bubbles may or may not overlap
Bubble(s) is not a technical term, but we like it!
The box represents?all?outcomes
There is no standardised symbol for this purpose
Bubbles are labelled with their event name (A, B, etc)
The numbers inside a Venn diagram (there should be one in each region) will represent either a?frequency?or a?probability
In the case of probabilities being shown, all values should total 1
What do the different regions and bubbles overlapping mean on a Venn diagram?
This will depend on how many events there are and how the outcomes overlap
Venn diagrams show ‘AND’?and ‘OR’?statements easily
Worked Example
Exam Tip
The rectangle in a Venn diagram is a key part of the diagram
it represents all possible outcomes of the experiment
the bubbles merely represent the events we are particularly interested in
there is usually a few possibilities that fall outside of these events so this would be the section outside the bubbles but inside the rectangle
A quick ‘mini-Venn’ diagram shading the parts required to answer the question can be useful rather than always drawing a full Venn diagram with all its values