Hello Jimmy and thanks for your reply
You got 1 and 2 correct but not the third one and I don’t understand the forth!
I need to create a file for the entire strings which I explained below (432 billions of combinations) first then start filtering those strings using your “selection criteria” as you called it to create a new dbase and redundant the non relevant strings but guaranteeing that there will be one triple linked numbers in that database as I mentioned in my previous post!
The next filtering step is to hold this new file against the drawn order of UK results (any country) and do the linked-triple search! Trash the strings which do not take a linked-triple match to history of results... so what is left in that dbase is purely relevant to UK results whereas every line has three numbers matching to UK results in drawn order!
What I want to know how many strings will be left in that file which would have direct triple relation to UK results then I can compare that dbase to my customised dbase!
749 = 85,900,584 strings of combinations
Each string = 5040 unique settings including all the wheels
85,900,584 x 5040 = 432,938,943,360 total unique strings with all possible settings and wheels in 749 lotteries!
1- Create this 432 billions combination file
2- Calculate how many linked-triple exist in 749
3- Redundant the duplicates triple-linked
4- Test run this file against any history of results in drawn order
5- Redundant the strings which do not have triple-linked numbers to the results
6- Pure and direct file to history of results = how many strings?
I don’t know if you can see my point or not but if you do a little search in your drawn order results you will find the linked numbers are keep on repeating but in different format or representation and the most appeared is 712 which means the Bonus Ball wheeled to the first position!
I will give you more detail about my customised dbase after few more test runs. I am also trying to find an alternative dbase file to drawn order which I will share the outcome with you.
Regards,
Moses