In a class of 30 students, 13 have a cat and 10 have a dog. There are 4 students who have a cat and a dog. What is the probability that a student who does not have a dog has a cat?
We can start by using the formula for conditional probability `P(A|B) = P(A and B) / P(B)` where `P(A|B)` is the probability of event A given that event B has occurred, `P(A and B)` is the probability of both events A and B occurring, and `P(B)` is the probability of event B occurring.

In this case, we want to find the probability that a student who does not have a dog has a cat, which we can write as `P(cat | no dog)`

Using the information given in the problem, we can calculate the probabilities we need:

```
P(cat) = 13/30 (the proportion of students who have a cat)
P(dog) = 10/30 (the proportion of students who have a dog)
P(cat and dog) = 4/30 (the proportion of students who have both a cat and a dog)
P(no dog) = 1 - P(dog) = 20/30 (the proportion of students who do not have a dog)
```

To find `P(cat | no dog)`, we need to use Bayes' theorem, `P(cat | no dog) = P(cat and no dog) / P(no dog)`, and we can calculate `P(cat and no dog)` as follows:
```
P(cat and no dog) = P(cat) - P(cat and dog)
P(cat and no dog) = 13/30 - 4/30
P(cat and no dog) = 9/30
```
Now we can substitute this value and P(no dog) into the formula for conditional probability:
```
P(cat | no dog) = (9/30) / (20/30)
P(cat | no dog) = 9/20
```
Therefore, the probability that a student who does not have a dog has a cat is 9/20. Hope this helps!