mlbridge, on 2019-December-14, 19:56, said:
#4769 - 1 hand with a void
#5170 - 4 different hands with a void.
So in 36 boards, 8 different hands had a void and one hand had 2 voids.
Explain to me how that is random.
The basic problem here is that you fundamentally misunderstand basic concepts like sample sizes and the requirement that one formulates hypothesizes BEFORE looking at the data set rather than afterwards.
If you go and look at a small data sample, you'll almost inevitably be able to find some way in which the observed data does not match the expected.
Case in your original posting, you were complaining that there were too many singletons.
I believe the quote was
Quote
Now, after looking at a new set of boards you are advancing the claim that the the hand generator is producing too many voids.
If you want folks to take you seriously, make a specific testable claim about the hands that BBO generates and we can test these against some future day's worth of tournament data.