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User:Pathoschild/About:Standardised vote calculation

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This page explains standardised vote calculation, the mathematics and logic used, and its possible applications.


Standardised vote calculation is a mathemetical method for calculating variations of majority consensus. The method is essentially dividing into two categories: count and WSRc. All values are rounded to the first decimal place below zero.

Values

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Count

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Total
Individual value

The count values measure the number of each vote type in percentage ratio to the total.

WSRc

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WSRc

The weighted support ratio constant (WSRc) estimates the relative strength of consensus by counting and weighing the counted values. Practically speaking, the constant is a number that increases for discussions with a high number of votes and a high support ratio. This constant is used to compare multiple discussions to gauge the relative strength of consensus; for example, this may be used to select featured texts.

Template

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Usage

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{{User:Pathoschild/Sandbox2
 |support =
 |oppose  =
 |neutral =
}}

The template takes three parameters, as shown above, with numerical values.

Examples

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High opposition (low participation)

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Votes (7): 1 support (14.3%), 3 oppose (42.9%), 3 neutral (42.9%).
WSRc: -0 (about SVC)

No clear consensus (low participation)

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Votes (18): 10 support (55.6%), 8 oppose (44.4%), 0 neutral (0%).
WSRc: 2.1 (about SVC)

Borderline (high participation)

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Votes (100): 75 support (75%), 25 oppose (25%), 0 neutral (0%).
WSRc: 58 (about SVC)

High support (low participation)

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Votes (11): 10 support (90.9%), 1 oppose (9.1%), 0 neutral (0%).
WSRc: 27.7 (about SVC)

High support (high participation)

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Votes (110): 100 support (90.9%), 10 oppose (9.1%), 0 neutral (0%).
WSRc: 314 (about SVC)