barmar, on Jan 1 2009, 04:12 AM, said:
Note also that the regulation mentions the possibility of discontinuous ranges. Suppose a bid showed 12-14 or 17-19. Presumably the total range is the sum of the ranges of the pieces. So would you say this has a range of 2+2 = 4? But consider this: a range of 14-19 could also be described as 14-16 or 17-19; the first would have a range (by your calculation) of 5, the second would have a range of 4. And if you went to the extreme, desribing it as 14-14 or 15-15 or 16-16 or 17-17 or 18-18 or 19-19, the range would be 0+0+0+0+0+0 = 0!
But if you consider the range to be the number of elements in the set, you don't have any such anomalies. The range would be 6 via either calculation.
>So if a bid showed a specific HCP precisely, you would say it
>has a 0 HCP range? I doubt most players would agree.
Learn to read Barry.
I already specifically noted that the usage of the word range amongst bridge players does not conform to standard usage. Moreover, I commented that regulations that are written for bridge players need to conform to way that bridge players communicate.
>Note also that the regulation mentions the possibility of
>discontinuous ranges. Suppose a bid showed 12-14 or 17-19.
>Presumably the total range is the sum of the ranges of the pieces.
>So would you say this has a range of 2+2 = 4?
I would do no such thing...
First of all, I wouldn't use the word "range" in isolation to describe a two way NT. It's nonsensical and doesn't provide useful information.
Second: if I were standing on formality and chose to apply the statistical concept of a range I'd hope that I would apply it properly.... If I have a set of numbers
[12, 13, 14, 18, 19]
the range is 19 - 12 = 7