#1
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Table VPIP
I'm curious.
How do you determine table VPIP for a table you played a few weeks ago? Is there something in PT that will let you figure that out in the sesion screen? Is there a way that PT will give you a weighted VPIP based on number of hands played? i.e. Someone who you've played 1k hands with with vpip 5% would swing it down more than someone with 12 hands vpip 35% would swing it up. --Dave. |
#2
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Re: Table VPIP
bump
I'm not sure how to do this other than by writing it down when I see it on PV. |
#3
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Re: Table VPIP
If bob plays 1% of hands for 10,000,000 hands in PT and everyone else at the tables plays 100% for 100,000 hands in a row, why would you want a weighted average that would display 1%?
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#4
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Re: Table VPIP
I might not. You could be right.
Is it possible for me to check a session in PT and see what the simple average table VPIP was during that time? --Dave. Edit: There was a post on the small stakes forum a while back where they were talking about the table vpip dropping over the last few months at 2/4 and 3/6. How were they getting that data? |
#5
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Re: Table VPIP
Firstly, it would say 9% + (my % was / 10).
Secondly, you're right. [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] That being said, in this example, you'd want to isolate those 100,000 hands for sure. What I was thinking is better applied to when you're comparing your bb/100 over 100,000 hands to another bb/100 over 100,000 hands result: You could use the weighted average vpip of all your opponents much better than a simple average. For an individual table, though, you're 100% right: you want a simple average. My mistake. So... now that that's clear, how would I go about finding vpip of my opponents for a session (it would probably have to be weighted according to how many hands they played with me in the session), or how would I determine, for 10k hands, what my average table vpip was? [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img] I know that there was a SS post about this, but I don't know where they were gathering their data. Take care, and play well, Dave. |
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