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mitthrowaway2yesterday at 9:51 PM1 replyview on HN

No, what I'm saying is that 0.7 is the ending point of the calculation, and there is no 80% associated with it. The 0.7 number already factors in my uncertainty in all of my knowledge about whether it will rain tomorrow. Saying that you're 80% sure of your 0.7 probability forecast throws a TypeErrorException.


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woskyesterday at 10:03 PM

yes and in my example the ending point of the calculation is 0.58.

I make an intermediate step explicit in this derivation because it is important for the understanding of the problem.

This kind of intermediate step happens a lot in forecasting competitions, where participants are asked for their forecasts and their confidence in their forecasts. I want to show here that you need to include that in your forecast (all you belief) and not keep it separated.

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