Hi Kristofer, --- En date de : Lun 20.10.08, Kristofer Munsterhjelm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a écrit : > You could also have the approval version of Smith,IRV. Call > it > Condorcet,Approval. I think it's Smith (so it would be > Smith,Approval), > but I'm not sure. The method is this: Drop candidates, > starting with the > Approval loser and moving upwards, until there's a CW. > Then that one is > the winner.
This method has been invented from scratch a few times; most recently it was called "Definite Majority Choice." I don't think it can be described using double-slash or comma notation... For instance Smith//FPP would mean that you eliminate all non-Smith candidates and elect the FPP winner pretending that the eliminated candidates never existed. Whereas Smith,FPP would mean that you elect that Smith candidate who had the most first preferences to start with. When "Condorcet" is the first or "Approval" is the second component, it's not likely to make a difference which punctuation is used. > Is Condorcet,Approval (Smith,Approval?) nonmonotonic? If > not, and it is > Smith, then you have a simple Smith-compliant > Condorcet/approval method. It satisfies Smith and monotonicity. Kevin Venzke __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? En finir avec le spam? Yahoo! Mail vous offre la meilleure protection possible contre les messages non sollicités http://mail.yahoo.fr Yahoo! Mail ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
