m1cha, on 2016-July-14, 18:41, said:
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I just afraid ton of people would ask the same question in confusion: "What to do with high cards in NT model? Should it change? Your document doesn't say anything."
Probably
. You may want to add a phrase under that table saying: "In other situations, HCP points do not deviate from the base values." That might do it.
I replaced it with spelled out rule in some places where such rule can be spelled at all. I also kept the table as well as a reference in case the rule itself is not straightforward (like for short suits).
m1cha, on 2016-July-14, 18:41, said:
I suggest you call your points Evolin points. It carries the ideas of your last name, "evaluation", "evolution" and can be remembered with the name "Evelyn".
Wow! Thanks for a great name. Now my forum post really starts to pay out.
"Evolin" is cool but I'm afraid it won't stick as a new word. "Evelyn" is more promising. Same word already exists and people would just transfer the meaning and remember it easier. What do you think?
http://www.sheknows....mes/name/evelyn
In American the meaning of the name Evelyn is: Life.
m1cha, on 2016-July-14, 18:41, said:
And in the section "Value duplication: high cards in your hand against partner's shortness (out of 3 top cards)", I cannot understand why a Q opposite a void should get +1 point; and I also cannot understand why a K opposite a singleton should get -1 while opposite a void it gets 0. I tend to think that these are statistical glitches, is that possible? I would expect -1 for both opposite a void (and perhaps also opposite a singleton), but this is just a guess. I think I would keep the figures at 0 until I have better evidence. Sorry, I have no idea where to get you more data.
That is the same story again - statistics. I load pile of games into the machine and it gives out some coefficients those it thinks are best fit. I just may round them to the nearest whole number, that's all. In my last document I explicitly highlighted this irregularity with little speculation. Document describes the most exact version I can come up with. People are free to ignore/change part of it giving up little of precision in favor of memorability. That's fine and this is how it work. In fact this document IS as simplification of even more complex version that I intentionally slashed to not scare people away from the first sight of it.
Now here are my speculation about K against a singleton. We are talking about controls
duplication. First round controls are Ace and void. Second round controls are King and singlet. Practically A against a singleton is not a duplication as A controls first round and singleton - second. Q against singleton is not a duplication either as Q doesn't control either first or second round but singleton does. While K against a singleton is a duplication
by definition as they both control second round. Same story about void. A against void is a duplication while K or Q is not and you see it in the table. As for two-three cards combinations I cannot say anything - it is all statistics.