How many possible, different bidding-auctions are there?
#1
Posted 2016-August-14, 14:27
(We are talking abt auctions that are legal according to bridge-rules, not only the ones that are sensible...)
Just discovered this calculation, and it's actually beyond staggering
Before you check the link below, I invite you to work out with pen/paper -- or just have a guess :
Assume North deals, and opens 7♥.
In how many different, legal ways (according to bridge-rules) can such an auction proceed before it completes?
[a] 38
[b] 388
[c] 3388
[d] infinity
http://tedmuller.us/...dgeAuctions.htm
#2
Posted 2016-August-14, 18:26
Stefan_O, on 2016-August-14, 14:27, said:
(We are talking abt auctions that are legal according to bridge-rules, not only the ones that are sensible...)
Just discovered this calculation, and it's actually beyond staggering
Before you check the link below, I invite you to work out with pen/paper -- or just have a guess :
Assume North deals, and opens 7♥.
In how many different, legal ways (according to bridge-rules) can such an auction proceed before it completes?
[a] 38
[b] 388
[c] 3388
[d] infinity
http://tedmuller.us/...dgeAuctions.htm
Just think how many more possibilities there are once we start allowing for insufficient bids...
#3
Posted 2016-August-14, 18:37
For example, 2D-P-P-P is one auction. However, there are likely several hundred variations on what Opener and Responder will have in this one auction.
-P.J. Painter.
#5
Posted 2016-August-16, 12:39
barmar, on 2016-August-16, 08:33, said:
Sounds like some of my partnerships.
-P.J. Painter.
#6
Posted 2016-August-16, 13:21
#7
Posted 2016-August-23, 10:16
If you design your auction (cooperatively with the opps) to just describe every card in your hands ('twas said), you will always have described the last cards by the 6♦ bid.
#8
Posted 2016-August-24, 08:18
Jinksy, on 2016-August-23, 10:16, said:
So you have a choice between describing your hands completely and getting to a reasonable contract.
#9
Posted 2016-August-26, 00:37
Stefan_O, on 2016-August-14, 14:27, said:
(We are talking abt auctions that are legal according to bridge-rules, not only the ones that are sensible...)
Just discovered this calculation, and it's actually beyond staggering
Before you check the link below, I invite you to work out with pen/paper -- or just have a guess :
Assume North deals, and opens 7♥.
In how many different, legal ways (according to bridge-rules) can such an auction proceed before it completes?
[a] 38
[b] 388
[c] 3388
[d] infinity
http://tedmuller.us/...dgeAuctions.htm
hi Stefan_O,
I love Ted Muller's and Richard Pavlicek's (rpbridge.net) bridge sites
Actually answer [d] is incorrect. ( I'm having one of my pedantic days - apologies ) It is an finite number, but a very. very, actually very, very, very large one.
It anyone wants some light relief from our lovely card game, it's worth logging into both Ted's and Richard's sites. Great fun!
#10
Posted 2016-August-26, 05:58
The_Badger, on 2016-August-26, 00:37, said:
Actually answer [d] is incorrect. ( I'm having one of my pedantic days - apologies ) It is an finite number, but a very. very, actually very, very, very large one.
I think you misread the question. [c] 3388 is hardly a very, very, very large number.
#12
Posted 2016-August-26, 14:50
Starting from 7♥, doesn't look overly difficult. Let's consider the cases where 7♥ - with all its doubling options - is the final contract. There are seven cases: passed, two ways of being doubled (by E or W), then four ways of being doubled and redoubled.
Now for each of these seven cases, there are three ways in which the next bid of 7♠ can occur. Thereafter there are, once again, seven pass/double/redouble combos. That makes (7 x 3 x 7) possible ways in which 7♠ becomes the contract.
Also there are an equal number of cases where the next bid is 7NT (bypassing 7♠). Another (7 x 3 x 7)
Finally, for each 7♠ case, there are another 3 x 7 cases where the final outcome is 7NT. (7 x 3 x 7 x 3 x 7) in all.
So, to tot up:
7 +
(7 x 3 x 7) +
(7 x 3 x 7) +
(7 x 3 x 7 x 3 x 7)
On my calculator this comes to...... 3388 ..... bingo!
#13
Posted 2016-August-26, 20:14
#14
Posted 2016-August-27, 02:42
A0 = 7
An = 7 + 21(A0 + A1 + ..... + An-1)
Using this formula, I get:
7NT: A = 7
7♠: A = 154
7♥: A = 3388
7♦: A = 74536
7♣: A = 1639792
etc.
I didn't try extending the process all the way down to 1♣, but at a rough estimate, I'd say that for 1♣ A = about 1046 or around ten billion billion billion billion billion......
[edit]I wrote the above before looking at the Ted Muller link in the OP (honest! ). Seems my guesstimate was out by a factor of about ten - but at least in the right ball-park!
#15
Posted 2016-August-27, 09:41
661_Pete, on 2016-August-27, 02:42, said:
[edit]I wrote the above before looking at the Ted Muller link in the OP (honest! ). Seems my guesstimate was out by a factor of about ten - but at least in the right ball-park!
How do you get a factor of 10? The number in the link was 2.4 X 1018.
#17
Posted 2016-August-27, 10:43
I would just guessed it could be no more than "like a few dozens or so"... but looking into the math details, it turns out it multiplies much faster than one (I) would believe.
#18
Posted 2016-August-27, 20:16
661_Pete, on 2016-August-27, 02:42, said:
A0 = 7
An = 7 + 21(A0 + A1 + ..... + An-1)
Isn't that essentially the same formula as in the article that the OP linked to? And it includes the grand total for starting from 1♣.
#19
Posted 2016-August-28, 04:05
barmar, on 2016-August-27, 20:16, said:
Yes it is. Sorry, I hadn't noticed the link in the OP before I started number crunching. But I figured it out for myself: cross my heart, I haven't plagiarised Ted Muller! Honest!
#20
Posted 2016-August-29, 08:29
661_Pete, on 2016-August-28, 04:05, said:
I suppose there's something satisfying about the confirmation that your calculations were correct.