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Define a constant somewhere to represent the smallest size of a course, ie 0.25 credits.
Then represent an assertion as something like
from areas: 1 of 3 areas = ⅓
from courses, count credits: N of M credits
IE, 0.25 of 1.25 credits would be 1/5, because the smallest Course unit is 0.25
from courses, count courses: 1 of 2 courses = ½
etc
A count-rule is N of 2, where the first 1 is the sum of the ranks of the children items, and the second is the sum of the ranks of the post-audit checks. (… yes, I think that makes sense.)
So if you have four children and two checks, and the sum of the children is ½, and the sum of the checks is ½, you get, uh, ½ lol because it's 1 out of 2.
A query rule is out of N, where N is the number of assertions within it. So if there's two rules, at ¼ and ½ respectively, the final value is … um, ¾ over 2? wait…
Hmm.
How do you do 1.5? 1 and ½, right?
So… ¾ of 2, but that's not it, I'm looking for 0.75 over 2, which is, uh, 7/16? I think? Sure.
Hmm. Anyway, stuff to think about.
Need to think through if this helps with the issue of
A: ECON 161
B: (both MGMT 120 and ECON 281)
where A's rank is currently 1.0, but B's rank can be 2.0, because it has two items.
If represented as fractions, both branches would be 1/1, I think, which would allow them to correspond properly.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Define a constant somewhere to represent the smallest size of a course, ie 0.25 credits.
Then represent an assertion as something like
etc
A count-rule is N of 2, where the first 1 is the sum of the ranks of the children items, and the second is the sum of the ranks of the post-audit checks. (… yes, I think that makes sense.)
So if you have four children and two checks, and the sum of the children is ½, and the sum of the checks is ½, you get, uh, ½ lol because it's 1 out of 2.
A query rule is out of N, where N is the number of assertions within it. So if there's two rules, at ¼ and ½ respectively, the final value is … um, ¾ over 2? wait…
Hmm.
How do you do 1.5? 1 and ½, right?
So… ¾ of 2, but that's not it, I'm looking for 0.75 over 2, which is, uh, 7/16? I think? Sure.
Hmm. Anyway, stuff to think about.
Need to think through if this helps with the issue of
where A's rank is currently 1.0, but B's rank can be 2.0, because it has two items.
If represented as fractions, both branches would be 1/1, I think, which would allow them to correspond properly.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: