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Post by Vaios on Jul 28, 2013 0:29:13 GMT 1
Neither I.
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Post by Jan on Jul 28, 2013 0:35:35 GMT 1
^ Same. Hope anybody understands those numbers !? ...
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Post by Deleted on Jul 28, 2013 2:03:20 GMT 1
Hope anybody understands those numbers !? ... I kinda do So here's a picture of the top 6 favourites on the day of the Eurovision 2013 Final As you can see it shows next to Denmark in the first column "4/7". And "11/2" for Norway But you can see that the Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Russia and Italy are just normal numbers, unlike Denmark and Norway. To make it easier to understand, as I said before in the first column next to Denmark it shows "4/7" to make that a normal number, just see how many times 4 goes into 7. The answer would be 1 with 3/4 remaining. 3/4 (or three fourths) of 1 is 0.75. So the 2 numbers we have is 1 and 0.75. Than you plus them together and the answer would be €1.75. And for Norway, in the first column it shows "11/2". As the 2nd number is the lowest you see how many times 2 goes into 11. The answer would be 5 with 1/2 remaining. 1/2 (or a half) of 1 is 0.50. So the numbers we have are 5 and 0.50. Plus them together and the answer would be €5.50. In the other columns they are the betting odds from another betting company As Denmark has the lowest number it is the favourite to win, as Italy has the highest number it is the least favourite to win. When people bet on a country to win the odds for that country will go lower or may stay the same depending on how much you bet, if you bet €1 it may stay the same but if you bet €1,000 the odds will drop significantly And for the people that bet, say if a guy called Bob bet on the Ukraine to win and let's say they bet €50, as you can see the odds for the Ukraine to win is €9. If Ukraine win, Bob would win €450 as 50 times 9 is 450. So you just times the betting odds by how much you bet. Sorry if this confused you, when I explain things I tend to confuse myself sometimes
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Post by Deleted on Jul 28, 2013 7:31:13 GMT 1
Hope anybody understands those numbers !? ... I kinda do So here's a picture of the top 6 favourites on the day of the Eurovision 2013 Final As you can see it shows next to Denmark in the first column "4/7". And "11/2" for Norway But you can see that the Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Russia and Italy are just normal numbers, unlike Denmark and Norway. To make it easier to understand, as I said before in the first column next to Denmark it shows "4/7" to make that a normal number, just see how many times 4 goes into 7. The answer would be 1 with 3/4 remaining. 3/4 (or three fourths) of 1 is 0.75. So the 2 numbers we have is 1 and 0.75. Than you plus them together and the answer would be €1.75. And for Norway, in the first column it shows "11/2". As the 2nd number is the lowest you see how many times 2 goes into 11. The answer would be 5 with 1/2 remaining. 1/2 (or a half) of 1 is 0.50. So the numbers we have are 5 and 0.50. Plus them together and the answer would be €5.50. In the other columns they are the betting odds from another betting company As Denmark has the lowest number it is the favourite to win, as Italy has the highest number it is the least favourite to win. When people bet on a country to win the odds for that country will go lower or may stay the same depending on how much you bet, if you bet €1 it may stay the same but if you bet €1,000 the odds will drop significantly And for the people that bet, say if a guy called Bob bet on the Ukraine to win and let's say they bet €50, as you can see the odds for the Ukraine to win is €9. If Ukraine win, Bob would win €450 as 50 times 9 is 450. So you just times the betting odds by how much you bet. Sorry if this confused you, when I explain things I tend to confuse myself sometimes I'm able to create them now well done nick
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Post by MG on Dec 22, 2015 2:15:14 GMT 1
Hope anybody understands those numbers !? ... I kinda do So here's a picture of the top 6 favourites on the day of the Eurovision 2013 Final As you can see it shows next to Denmark in the first column "4/7". And "11/2" for Norway But you can see that the Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Russia and Italy are just normal numbers, unlike Denmark and Norway. To make it easier to understand, as I said before in the first column next to Denmark it shows "4/7" to make that a normal number, just see how many times 4 goes into 7. The answer would be 1 with 3/4 remaining. 3/4 (or three fourths) of 1 is 0.75. So the 2 numbers we have is 1 and 0.75. Than you plus them together and the answer would be €1.75. And for Norway, in the first column it shows "11/2". As the 2nd number is the lowest you see how many times 2 goes into 11. The answer would be 5 with 1/2 remaining. 1/2 (or a half) of 1 is 0.50. So the numbers we have are 5 and 0.50. Plus them together and the answer would be €5.50. In the other columns they are the betting odds from another betting company As Denmark has the lowest number it is the favourite to win, as Italy has the highest number it is the least favourite to win. When people bet on a country to win the odds for that country will go lower or may stay the same depending on how much you bet, if you bet €1 it may stay the same but if you bet €1,000 the odds will drop significantly And for the people that bet, say if a guy called Bob bet on the Ukraine to win and let's say they bet €50, as you can see the odds for the Ukraine to win is €9. If Ukraine win, Bob would win €450 as 50 times 9 is 450. So you just times the betting odds by how much you bet. Sorry if this confused you, when I explain things I tend to confuse myself sometimes i only got more confused
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Post by MG on Dec 22, 2015 2:29:04 GMT 1
OK, I'm fine with this. Jan pls
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Post by fabbi on Dec 22, 2015 11:54:23 GMT 1
I kinda do So here's a picture of the top 6 favourites on the day of the Eurovision 2013 Final As you can see it shows next to Denmark in the first column "4/7". And "11/2" for Norway But you can see that the Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Russia and Italy are just normal numbers, unlike Denmark and Norway. To make it easier to understand, as I said before in the first column next to Denmark it shows "4/7" to make that a normal number, just see how many times 4 goes into 7. The answer would be 1 with 3/4 remaining. 3/4 (or three fourths) of 1 is 0.75. So the 2 numbers we have is 1 and 0.75. Than you plus them together and the answer would be €1.75. And for Norway, in the first column it shows "11/2". As the 2nd number is the lowest you see how many times 2 goes into 11. The answer would be 5 with 1/2 remaining. 1/2 (or a half) of 1 is 0.50. So the numbers we have are 5 and 0.50. Plus them together and the answer would be €5.50. In the other columns they are the betting odds from another betting company As Denmark has the lowest number it is the favourite to win, as Italy has the highest number it is the least favourite to win. When people bet on a country to win the odds for that country will go lower or may stay the same depending on how much you bet, if you bet €1 it may stay the same but if you bet €1,000 the odds will drop significantly And for the people that bet, say if a guy called Bob bet on the Ukraine to win and let's say they bet €50, as you can see the odds for the Ukraine to win is €9. If Ukraine win, Bob would win €450 as 50 times 9 is 450. So you just times the betting odds by how much you bet. Sorry if this confused you, when I explain things I tend to confuse myself sometimes i only got more confused Me too tbh. I never unserstood odds anyway.
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