Hi all,
I'm at the stage of learning and understanding Prime Numbers. A few players have some interesting theories on a number selection strategy for primes.
I'm not particularly interested in Prime numbers as a predictive tool but purely a filtering tool. Analysis shows that observed primes in the Canadian and UK 6/49 run close to the theoretical odds. Hence I am considering eliminating combinations that contain 5 and 6 primes= 0.77% of the population <combined odds>.
My problem is I keep thinking what's the big deal! I can't seriously be thinking about defining and filtering subgroups of a 6/49 lotto in terms of this integer attribute! My point is this, has anyone run a series of tests on randomly selected groups of 15 numbers. And compared the observed appearances in their 6/49 lotto to prime number appearances in each draw? (I know the theoretical odds are identical).
I would really love to know peoples opinions. Or has this discussion taken place before?
SHTH
I'm at the stage of learning and understanding Prime Numbers. A few players have some interesting theories on a number selection strategy for primes.
I'm not particularly interested in Prime numbers as a predictive tool but purely a filtering tool. Analysis shows that observed primes in the Canadian and UK 6/49 run close to the theoretical odds. Hence I am considering eliminating combinations that contain 5 and 6 primes= 0.77% of the population <combined odds>.
My problem is I keep thinking what's the big deal! I can't seriously be thinking about defining and filtering subgroups of a 6/49 lotto in terms of this integer attribute! My point is this, has anyone run a series of tests on randomly selected groups of 15 numbers. And compared the observed appearances in their 6/49 lotto to prime number appearances in each draw? (I know the theoretical odds are identical).
I would really love to know peoples opinions. Or has this discussion taken place before?
SHTH