Hi,
How many cards are there in a deck?
56 or 54?
thanks!

Erru

2011/1/27 Brandon Stewart <brandonmstewart@gmail.com>
You draw a sample of size n (where n is the number of observations in the dataset).  Remember to draw with replacement though or you would draw the same sample every time!

Brandon


On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 3:34 PM, Mark Bell <markbell@mit.edu> wrote:
In Problem 2.4, how many observations are we supposed to sample from the original dataset to create each of the 1000 new datasets (i.e. how many rows should each of the 1000 new datasets have)?

Cheers,
Mark


On 27 January 2011 09:03, Molly Roberts <molly.e.roberts@gmail.com> wrote:
Yes, assume the aces are either high or low. 

Molly

On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 2:19 AM, Colin Sullivan <cdsulliv@gmail.com> wrote:
For problem 1.3, how should we deal with aces?  Can we just assume that aces are either high or low (rather than allowing both an A-2-3-4-5 straight and a 10-J-Q-K-A straight)?
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--
Erru Yang

Global Health and Population
Harvard School of Public Health
631-880-9605