I just started in/out grouping chapter 9 LG (5TH EDITION) PG 351
the game:
"A horse breeder is deciding which of seven horses N, O, P, R, S,T,V- to sell at auction this year. The breeder will determine which horses to sell according to the following restrictions:
rules:
1. R <--/--> P ( if R is sold auction, P is not: does it mean, if one of these two is IN the other one must be OUT, however can they both be out or no?)
2. O<--/-->N (Either O or N is sold at auction, BUT NOT BOTH: does this mean, O or N one must be in and the other one out?)
3. -S---> -R contra: R-->S
4. -T---> V (T is not sold at auction, V is.- what I know is that, when the negative in on the sufficient, that means one of those two must be in when the other one is absent, however they both can be in. )
*When I have a negative in the necessary, I do this kind of diagram ei: R <---/--> P is this correct ?
* I'd like to know what are the big difference between rule 1 and 2: I feel like I get it but I'm still a little confuse. when I see the inferences that manhattan makes in pg 352.
the inferences that I made in this game was:
in | out
R/P (in and out)
O/N (in and out)
R &S (in)
T/V (in)
Though, i'm not sure wether R/P should be shown in the inference as "out" as well, for example, I'm sure that O/N must be in and out, because rule2 says one or the other one, but rule 1 R/P says only when this rule is trigger.
Also, I was confused at first because in the previous chapters (ordering) when the game have conditional statements, MH suggest to not add them in the diagram. I think that changes then when you don't have ordering games?
Going back to this particular game, explanation part (from book)
pg 353 explanation for question #1
I got the right answer B, however, the book in this pg has B: r, s, t,v
when it should be p,r,t,v (as stated in the original game pg 351) Please, tell me if this was a book mistake or am I missing something.
pg. 356 explanation for question #4 - I did not answer and the explanation has me even more confused
"if either R or S is sold, but not both, which of the following could be a complete and accurate list of horses that are NOT sold?"
from rule # 3 we know the if R-->S
so in the IN group must be S, placing the R in the OUT group.
When R is out, then P must be In
The book says D is the answer:
I don't see D as being the answer because it has O, P, R as not sold and R/P cannot be together, or does R/P not being together is only in the IN group?
Thank you very much!