> having answers that were very, very close is objectively worse than having numbers that are wildly wrong: very wrong numbers usually always mean a simply logic problem. Almost-correct numbers mean something more insidious.
Ha! I massively identify with this. 'The market-wide median is off by £3.07' is a much harder but to crack than the 'worse' report that 'the median is twice the max and the min is null'.
Ha! I massively identify with this. 'The market-wide median is off by £3.07' is a much harder but to crack than the 'worse' report that 'the median is twice the max and the min is null'.