On Sun, Nov 17, 2002 at 09:38:08AM -0500, Raul Miller wrote: > On Sun, Nov 17, 2002 at 12:50:59PM +0100, Jochen Voss wrote: > > A B C D X > > A - 27 24 29 29 > > B 22 - 25 29 28 > > C 25 24 - 30 32 > > D 21 21 19 - 30 > > X 21 22 18 18 - > > the Schwartz set is { A, B, C } > > proposition (A,C) is weakest -> eliminated > > proposition (B,C) is weakest -> eliminated > > Minor nit: it's (C,A) which is weakest, as (A,C) is not a proposition. Why not? To quote from your Nov 17 draft:
Definition: A proposition is a pair of options with a non-zero preference (S,T) for at least one of the options. The proposition is a defeat for one of the options unless the preference (S,T) equals the preference (T,S). Which part of this definition does not apply? > > A B C > > A - 27 0 > > B 22 - 0 > > C 0 0 - > > the Schwartz set is { A, C } > > Hmm.. I forgot to eliminate options with no votes for them. Be careful here: in this example my program agrees with Anthony Towns implementation, both get a tie between A and C. If we eliminate options with no votes for them (C in this case) we change the result: now the option A becomes the winner. It may be possible, that we want that change. But we should know that this is a deviantion from our former implementation. Maybe the electionmethods website can clarify this? I hope this helps, Jochen -- Omm (0)-(0) http://www.mathematik.uni-kl.de/~wwwstoch/voss/privat.html
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