best explanation of this I have seen thus far and I have been studying this and other voting methods by watching you tube videos for a college course for two weeks! organization is the key for this one and like he says, as soon as you realize who is fourth, third second and first write it down. it helps to note this as u go along and its essential to completing the problem with full credit anyway
@4:16 the stack of votes could also have voters second choice/preference other than Bob. Is it not so? However, your explanation says that the second choice/preference of the votes that Ana received is Bob. Please correct me, if I am wrong.
Sorry for the late reply. I don't monitor my channel much. I'm not sure you're understanding the piles correctly. Each pile contains the exact voting preferences. For example in the first pile, all 14 voters prefer Ana, then Bob second, then Cora third, then Dan last. Likewise, in the second pile, all 10 voters prefer Cora first, then Bob, then Dan, and then Ana last. Hopefully that clarifies things.
Your tests were real life situations hahaha... I have no loans thanks to community and transferred to State but damn your examples were low-key giving us hints at real life hahaha...
Hi Professor Yang, please make videos on first stats chapters. I need to refresh my memory on it. You are an amazing professor & explain everything very well. I'm currently taking Sociology stats at CSUF and my professor doesn't do a good job explaining... *cries
my good god, finally someone is able to say what the t is equal too!!! thank you kind sir. I'm doing an online stats college course and we're just expected to know how to get t. was never explained it.