jack said:
Hello, Frank, it is possible to calculate the jumps
* A digit, a number, a pair of numbers a trio, one quadruple, quintuple
And six numbers 60/6. mega sena?
* So start with the heel of digit, and will quintuple the number of 60/6 and sixth
* Can you do this?
* Objective = see the repeat interval of each class!
Jack, I'm not clear what the question is.
Is the first part calculate the
SKIPS for any pair, any triple, any quad, any quin and all 6 for a 6/60 game ?
If so, this spreadsheet relies on building up a picture by examining each skip value and adding its contribution to the whole. I've made some modifications to get the below figures.
Let me tell you that-
the average skip for a single ball in 6/60 is 9 draws
the average skip for a pair in 6/60 is 9 draws is 117 draws
the average skip for a triple in 6/60 is 1710 draws
the average skip for a quad in 6/60 is 32508 draws
the average skip for a quin in 6/60 is 910,251 draws
the average skip for all 6 in 6/60 is 50,063,859 draws
So that figure is the number of rows needed in the spreadsheet to be able to cover fully all the skips to give fully accurate results.
As it is designed to work out the spread of skips (0 to 5),( 6 to 10), (11 to 15), 16 and over , you don't need a spreadsheet to work out that the vast majority of skips will be in the latter 16 and over group !
I fail to see what practical use there is for these enormous figures when trying to pinpoint a single draw when they will hit.
I have no idea what a heel of a digit is.
jack said:
Please
For the number, see with neighboring position, example
the 60/6
* 15 of the 1st position this delay with the 2nd place 600 sweepstakes
I have no idea what this is all about, but with enormous figures for any balls in any order, you can forget about position! It's pointless !
