>>13747724>I guess I should have paid more attention in mathsYea. I'm just going to take a leap of faith and guess you are trying to predict crypto/stocks, which isn't possible unless you are manipulating it yourself, but manipulation can be occluded to look like """"computer trading""""" if you are smart enough and have enough capital. Dont ask me how I know or how to do it.
>So you say that 1/6 is the possibility of getting the right number.If the system is truly random, there is no way you can predict its outcome. In theory, a dice roll probably isn't the best example of a truly random outcome, but in practice, it's basically random.
>What else factors should be considered to bring in the closest match possible.Depends on what you are trying to predict. If I wanted to predict a dice roll, I would use data of its velocity, rotation, air temperature, the coefficient of restitution of the dice with the surface, etc. But it would take so much data that it would be basically impossible. It's kinda the same idea of "if I knew the position and direction of every atom in the universe, I would be able to predict the future" which is true but just impossible.
>Also in order to set up this start is there a video or link you can share so I can read about probability or statistics more, starting with making the sheet on excel.You should probably relearn all of math from Algebra to up to Calculus. Read a data science textbook maybe some calculus. If you are crunching large amounts of data, you should probably learn how to use python. The thing is, if you are trying to predict really complex systems, it's not easy. That's the shit people spend years educating themselves on and companies pay hundreds of thousands for them to do.