Welcome back
Bertil!
Bertil said:
I'm looking at a draw with 10-29-38-47-56 and comparing it with 01-29-38-47-56 and wonder how many unique digits a computer would count in each. Both clearly have one of each of the ten digits.
Would the first count as ten but the second as nine digits?
Would the computer be programmed to disregard leading zeros?
The computer will calculate it any way it's programmed to, either via an Excel formula or VBA code.
What you could have done is to put the two combinations above into the Excel file that I uploaded for you and see what the results were, but don't worry, I know what the answer will be.
You are quite right, the first combination will return 10 Digits and the second combination will return 9 Digits.
The question again comes back to whether or not you are going to treat the drawn Lotto numbers as
Single Digits or
Double Digits?
Could you please explain to me why you want to use
Double Digits for the drawn Lotto numbers instead of
Single Digits for numbers 1-9???
Regards,
PAB
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12:45, restate my assumptions.
(1) Mathematics is the language of nature.
(2) Everything around us can be represented and understood through numbers.
(3) If you graph the numbers of any system, patterns emerge. Therefore, there are patterns, everywhere in nature.