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The author shows how to compute the number of games in a single-elimination tournament, using the following notation: X - set of games Y - set of players L - set of losers (players that lost games) f: X -> Y - function that given a game, returns its loser (injection - each game has unique loser)
Next, the author claims that in the case of a double-elimination tournament:
you won’t have an injection, but a so-called “double-cover” of the set of players. What I mean by double-cover is that every y ∈ Y has a preimage f^{−1}(y) = {x ∈ X : f(x) = y} of size exactly 2
However, isn't this statement false? If Y is the set of ALL players (losers and a single winner), then all, but one of the elements of Y will have a preimage of size exactly 2, while the winner will have an preimage of size 0 or 1. Am I missing something or did the author make a mistake or mean to write L instead of Y in the cited fragment?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
@j2kun , thanks for the response! I agree, that the next sentence aims at clarifying the idea, however, as you mentioned the wording could be better. I submitted an erratum for this yesterday.
Now another question about solving the counting problem in the double-elimination setting.
I came up with an idea that loosely follows the solution of a single-elimination setting.
I define a new set E and a new function g that will be bijective between X and E.
E - set of ordered pairs (loser, game), constructed as {(y, p_i) : y in Y, p_i in f^{-1}(y), where f^{-1}(y) is not empty} (it is a subset of Y x X) g: X -> E - function that given a game returns the ordered pair (loser, game) (is injective since the tuple uniquely identifies a loser per game)
The size of set E is 2*|L| (or 2*|L| + 1 giving us the bounds) since we will have |L| = |Y| - 1 losers and each of them must've lost 2 times, optionally the winner lost once.
The newly defined function g is bijective, thus we can use the cardinality of set E to estimate the size of set X.
Could you comment whether there is a simpler way to approach this problem?
The author shows how to compute the number of games in a single-elimination tournament, using the following notation:
X
- set of gamesY
- set of playersL
- set of losers (players that lost games)f: X -> Y
- function that given a game, returns its loser (injection - each game has unique loser)Next, the author claims that in the case of a double-elimination tournament:
However, isn't this statement false? If
Y
is the set of ALL players (losers and a single winner), then all, but one of the elements of Y will have a preimage of size exactly 2, while the winner will have an preimage of size 0 or 1. Am I missing something or did the author make a mistake or mean to writeL
instead ofY
in the cited fragment?The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: