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But one thing that was conspicuously absent from his demonstrations of the size of 52! was the Birthday Paradox. Which led me to wonder:
- How many random deck permutations lead to a 50% chance of two identical? quick approximation (from wikipaedia) is sqrt(2*52!*.5)= sqrt(52!) ~ 9E33, no better.
- How many lead to a .5% chance? sqrt(52!*1E-2) - okay, 9E32...
- One in a million chance of it being coincidence...9E27 or so - still heat death of the universe level.
How about bridge hands? There are a lot fewer! less than a million hands leads to one repeat at p ~ .5. There are certainly players who play a million hands in their lifetime, even if it's in the realm of years. So: the chance that you've played an exact hand before in your life, if you play effectively fulltime, is better than even. In my case, I'm sure it looks like KT86 842 Q9 J754. Remembering it? NOYL.
Of course, the chance that it was a function of bad "shuffling" is much higher still :-) And the chance of a bridge *deal* being identical, never mind a whole set - pretty much zero from chance, as we'd hope.
But going back to the poker site - it's true in general, but if you're a specialized heads-up Hold'em player, the chance that you see the exact same "hand" in your life (the 9 relevant cards identical) is pretty much 1. If there are 25 relevant cards, at a 10-player table, much less so. Interesting...