Talk:Indecomposable distribution
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Maybe Typo ???
I feel this should be
-hgkamath
Yes. The "q" and "1" keys are close together. Thanks. I've fixed it. Michael Hardy 01:30, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
Don't understand example
[edit]- Suppose a random variable Y has a geometric distribution
- ... now let Dn be the nth binary digit of Y ... then the Ds are independent and
Umm. What?? I don't know how to fix this. --God made the integers (talk) 20:29, 13 January 2017 (UTC)
- It makes no sense. The second Y is not even an integer -- probably the 2^n needs to be in the numerator. But no reference is given. So we can't correct the logic, it is too far gone.
- In addition, the point of the example is not clearly explained, although the example is interesting and probably has a point. It reminds me of the fact that an abstract L^2 space has both a discrete decomposition and a continuous decomposition, but they are not compatible.
- I fixed the 2^n and the wording but there still are gaps. 2001:171B:2274:7C21:B13D:6306:7B8E:4356 (talk) 21:56, 12 April 2022 (UTC)