Statistics
Read historical widgets and fixed mathematical popups
Statistics is the LottoXray workspace for reviewing historical lottery data by draw window. Using Powerball as the example, the page combines frequency tables, positional data, range distribution, odd/even analysis, number sequence views, repeated endings, and fixed math popups.
Open Statistics if you already know what you want to do.
One draw window controls the statistics page
Analyze Last controls the historical draw window used by the statistics widgets. When the value changes, LottoXray recalculates counts, delays, percentages, and historical popup views for the selected lottery game.
On the free plan, the page can still show the full LottoXray database. Editing Analyze Last is part of the paid plan.
Statistics Controls
Analyze Last controls the historical window used by the widgets.
Open matching draw results from Statistics popups
Paid users can click a popup pill in Statistics to open the Draws table with matching historical results. LottoXray keeps the current Analyze Last window, so if Statistics is set to the latest 100 draws, Draws shows only the matches inside those 100 draws.
Free users can still review the Statistics widgets, but opening full filtered draw history from a popup is a paid feature.
Statistics popup to Draws
Open matching historical results from a popup pill.
Click the selected pill inside a Statistics popup.
Review white balls and the Powerball separately
Frequency widgets show how often each number appeared in the selected draw window and how long it has been absent. For games with a separate ball, LottoXray keeps that pool separate from the white balls.
White Ball Frequency
Hot, cold, overdue, or ascending views.
Powerball Frequency
Separate pool, same Analyze Last window.
Read sorted-column history, then open Positional Analysis
Powerball drawings do not assign white balls to fixed columns. LottoXray sorts the five white balls from lowest to highest, then labels those sorted positions as C1, C2, C3, C4, and C5. The table below shows an example of how white balls 1234 were distributed across those sorted columns in the last 1,000 drawings.
Positional Distribution
Historical counts by sorted column.
| Ball | C1 | C2 | C3 | C4 | C5 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 69 | 69 | ||||
| 2 | 67 | 8 | 75 | |||
| 3 | 66 | 7 | 1 | 74 | ||
| 4 | 58 | 16 | 74 |
Clicking a cell opens the fixed mathematical view for that ball and sorted column. In the example, ball 4 in C4 is very restrictive because only 65 possible Powerball white-ball combinations can place 4 in the fourth sorted column.
Positional Analysis
Fixed Powerball white-ball universe for number 4 by sorted column.
These values are total possible white-ball combinations by sorted column. They are not predictions and do not depend on Analyze Last.
Review range history and the fixed universe behind it
Range Distribution groups the white-ball pool into number ranges. The widget shows how often each range held zero, one, two, or more drawn white balls inside the selected Analyze Last window.
Range Distribution
Shows how many white balls landed inside each number range.
Clicking a range cell opens Range Analysis. In the example below, the selected rule is 11-20 · X (none), so no white ball is allowed to land in the 11-20 range. The popup lists distribution patterns that still place all five white balls across the remaining ranges.
The Combinations value is the number of exact white-ball sets that match each pattern. Powerball white balls run from 1 through 69, so most ranges contain 10 values, but the final 61-69 range contains only 9. A pattern that uses five 10-number ranges can produce 100,000 combinations; if one of those five ranges is 61-69, the count drops to 90,000.
Range Analysis
Fixed universe for the selected range rule.
The widget uses Analyze Last. The popup explains the fixed mathematical universe for the selected range setup.
Separate white-ball balance from Powerball balance
Odd/even widgets summarize historical balance inside the selected draw window. For Powerball, LottoXray also keeps the red Powerball odd/even analysis separate from the five sorted white balls.
Odd/Even Analysis
Historical white-ball odd/even structures.
Clicking a white-ball odd/even row opens the mathematical universe for that structure, separate from the Powerball pool.
Odd/Even Analysis
Fixed universe for a selected white-ball odd/even structure.
Historical count and delay come from Analyze Last. The popup shows how many possible combinations exist for the selected odd/even structure.
Powerball Analysis
Odd/even split for the Powerball pool.
Powerball Analysis reads the separate red Powerball pool. Its popup uses Powerball values only, while the white-ball universe remains separate.
Powerball Analysis
Fixed universe for odd and even Powerball values.
Review number sequence structures
The Number Sequences widget is a historical view. It organizes previous results by the longest number sequence in each draw, but it does not mean a sequence structure is due to happen in a future lottery draw.
Number Sequences
Longest number sequence in each historical draw.
Clicking a sequence row opens the fixed universe for that number sequence structure, such as no sequence or a two-number sequence.
Sequence Analysis
Fixed white-ball universe for selected number sequence structures.
The historical table shows how often these structures occurred in the chosen draw window. The popup shows the fixed combination universe.
Review repeated final digits
Repeated Endings is a historical view. It groups white balls by final digit so repeated endings are easier to review, but it does not mean a final digit is due to appear in a future lottery draw.
Repeated Endings
Click to view Fixed Mathematical Combinations
Repeated Endings groups white balls by final digit. The popup shows the selected ending group and its mathematical reference, not a signal that an ending is due.
Repeated Analysis
Fixed universe for repeated final digits.
Repeated endings group white balls by their final digit. This does not imply that an ending is due to appear.
Statistics questions
What does Statistics do in LottoXray?
Statistics lets you review historical lottery data through widgets such as frequency, positional distribution, range distribution, odd/even analysis, number sequences, repeated endings, and special-ball views when the game has one.
What does Analyze Last change?
Analyze Last changes the historical draw window used by the Statistics page. Counts, percentages, delays, and matching draw views update based on the selected window.
Do hot, cold, or overdue numbers have better odds?
No. Hot, cold, and overdue labels describe historical behavior only. They help organize past results, but they do not make a number more or less likely to appear in a future random draw.
Can Statistics predict lottery results?
No. Statistics is a historical review and mathematical reference tool. Lottery drawings are random and independent, so past frequency, delay, range, sequence, or ending patterns do not predict future results.
For informational and organizational use only
Statistics is for historical review and mathematical reference only. Lottery drawings are random and independent. This tool does not predict future results, change lottery probabilities, sell tickets, accept wagers, confirm prizes, or guarantee outcomes. Always verify official results, odds, prizes, and rules with the official lottery provider.
Ready to use Statistics?
Create a free account or open Statistics.