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  #111  
Old 07-30-2005, 02:30 PM
pokerplayer28 pokerplayer28 is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 6
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

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Your two paragraphs clash with each other idea wise. I hope you see why. You belive NL players cant protect their hands because, well, its just not possible to protect your hand in Limit holdem...then go onto say its just my opinion that a NL can adjust to Limit holdem just as well as a Limit player moving into NL.

Also, your first paragraph only continues to applifiy the ignorance NL players have about limit holdem and hence why most of the time (read: just about all the time), they suck at limit.

I can protect my hand. Its no big deal. Take the time to learn how to do it, you might see a difference. And why the hell do you want to push ppl off draws that come in 35 percent of the time (from the flop??) if you are a 65-70 percent favorite? You're making money on every bet that goes in.

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There are a lot of situations in limit holdem where nl AND LIMIT players cant protect their hand

Im a limit player

for your last paragraph read eds book or this thread of messages
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  #112  
Old 07-30-2005, 03:27 PM
LargeCents LargeCents is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2002
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Posts: 17
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

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I play limit.

The reason I play limit is because that's all that they offered way back in the "old days" when online poker first started. I went out and bought HEFAP and read and reread it until I was skilled enough to turn a profit. I still do.

When NL became available, I was intrigued by it, especially since that's all they show on TV poker shows. I've played in a lot of NL tourneys online and live, but cannot get comfortable playing NL ring games. I think it's purely a matter of experience. I just haven't invested enough hours reading the right books (I don't even know what these would be), or plain and simply playing. I tried a little NL last night, after reading this thread, for variety. I was pissed after I played AQo the same way I'd play it in limit, except making pot sized bets. I got a bunch of callers, but the flop was my dream flop, I keep betting only to run into a set. I just don't know what to watch out for, and mistakes are gonna take my whole stack, rather than a few BBs here and there. The learning curve just seems too steep, and I'm happy just playing limit for now.

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The hand you will probably lose most money with in NL is AQ because of the reverse implied odds. I won't even call a raise with it unless I have a good read on the raiser's choice of raising hands in his current position. However, I might call with something like 76s if the raise isn't too large and the money is deep. With position you could also reraise in NL with perhaps a pair of 9s because of the massive power of position in NL if he calls.

The problem with AQ is that you will win small pots against weaker aces and lose big pots against AK, 2P or sets. If a lot of money goes in and you have one pair with AQ, you aren't winning and its time to get out unless you have a read on your opponents bluffing strategies.

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True. This is backed up by my PT stats. Have lost more with AQo than any other hand it seems.

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Thanks for the responses, guys!

I know AQo is a "trouble hand" in NL. I read Doyle's section of SuperSystem and know how he "never plays" AQ. But, I guess I am currently in the limit mindset and figure it's a tragedy not to open with a raise in middle position with it. I can't hardly limp or lay it down. I guess it's something I've got to struggle with if I decide to play more NL.

I just got HOH I & II in the mail today, so I am completely hyped about playing some No-limit tourneys. I just signed myself up for a freeroll to knock off the rust, so maybe I'll be in the NL tourney forum getting my groove on. See y'all there! [img]/images/graemlins/wink.gif[/img]
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  #113  
Old 07-30-2005, 03:40 PM
JKDStudent JKDStudent is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: South Jersey
Posts: 134
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

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Not sure what you were replying to but it wasn't the above. Go back and trying reading my posts instead of replying to what you assume I was saying.

The original poster to whom I was replying stated that he wanted a call because it improved his EV over not being called. I pointed out that being called reduced his EV - i.e. his EV FOR THE CALL was negative. Everyone seems to be jumped in and replying to a claim I never made which is why I called them (and you it would seem) dim.

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Let's review, shall we?

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Fuchida:
I play NL cash games. For some reason I tend to do worse at limit and it frustrates the hell out of me when I can't blow someone off their obvious draw or at least make them pay far too much for it. I also have to take small bites out of a fish rather than sucking him in to losing his stack in one go and making room for the next victim, I mean player Probably frustration = tilt and explains why I don't do as well at limit.

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evans075:
Why wouldn't you want someone to pay you off with a drawing hand with your made hand. If someone is drawing to their flush he has a 35% chance of hitting it, that means 65% of the time you win. This is especially nice when the drawer isn't getting the odds to call. So for every 3 times I'm against someone drawing to the flush, they pay me off twice to me paying them off once. Thats +EV bro.


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Fuchida:
In the rather strange example you give above, you may win 65% of the time compared to 35% but that is completely irrelevant. What is important is the odds the chaser has in relation to his bet. If there is $100 in the pot on the turn and you bet $10, he is getting 11-1 to call with his flush draw. He will only hit 1 in 5 times but he is getting 11-1 on his bet. A very good investment for him. If you have the made hand, the $110 in the pot is currently yours and you are laying odds like a bookmaker to someone with only a 20% shot at it but you are giving him 11-1

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JKDStudent:
This is wrong.

There is $100 in the pot, and on the turn it is heads up. We have the best hand, our opponent is on a flush draw that will come in less than 20% of the time. If the hand goes to showdown with no further betting, our EV is $80, opponent's is $20.

We bet $10. Opponent is getting 11:1 odds on his call. He only needs roughly 4:1, so he calls. As he should. Does this mean our bet is wrong? NO! We're still winning this 80% of the time. That means of the $20 that just went into the pot (our bet and his call), $16 of it belongs to us. The call is +EV for the flush draw because of the size of the pot, but it's MORE +EV for us.

Also, let's say you put your opponent on a flush draw in that same pot. We bet $10, he calls. The third of a suit comes on the river. We check, he bets $10. We are getting 13:1 to call. That means that we only have to have the best hand less than 8% of the time for the call to be +EV. Can you say with 92% certainty that he was on a flush draw? But in no-limit, he can bluff you off the pot much more easily.

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Fuchida:
OMG! I am starting to understand why some people like limit if this is how they think.

$100 in the pot. If you bet $10 in the turn and he calls, then 20% of the time he will lose $10 and 80% of the time he will win $120. On average his call has a +EV of $16 (120 - 4x10)/5. Therefore you have negative EV. I hope you don't think you both have +EV.

I agree that in limit you still have to bet because even bad odds are better than infinite odds. You are effectively reducing the size of your negative EV. However, in NL, you can control the bet and give yourself a +EV situation regardless of the drawing player's actions.

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bobbyi:
Due to the $100 already in the pot, you do both have +EV. If there is $100 in the pot and his EV is $16, where do you think the rest of the money is going? Do the magical equity fairies come down and take it away?

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Fuchida:
For some reason I am struggling to get this simple concept through

The previous poster was suggesting his EV increases if the chaser calls the bet. That isn't the case. The player with the made hand has negative EV on the chasers call compared to a fold. In Limit the bettor wants a fold, not a call.

If the caller calls the $10 he improves his chance of gaining the pot and therefore reduces the chance of the made hand. If the chaser folds, the made hand gets 100% of the pot

In NL, you can set the bet so that you either get the pot or the chaser makes a -EV call. I don't think I can spell this out any more simply so if it still doesn't get through the limited limit brain, I will just give up.

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JKDStudent:
...are... are you serious? A little piece of me just died inside reading this.

There's $100 in the pot. He has a flush draw, which means he will LOSE 80% of the time. Not win. WE are making the $16 on the bet and call.

Yes, two people can have positive EV. Because of money already in the pot.

Just... wow. Wow.

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Fuchida:
Can people really be this dim? Yes, you get $10 if he calls and doesn't make his draw but you lose $110 if he does make it. I can see that a career in professional poker was a +EV move if people are really this bad at math.

OK, last time - with all the math

100 in the pot plus 10 from you

If he folds, you get $110 on average

If he calls, you get 120 80% of the time and nothing 20% of the time. Therefore on average you get (120x4)/5 = $96

Therefore, if he calls, you lose $14.

How can this not be any clearer???

Please explain, with the supporting math rather than the usual, 'just because it is', how you gain money if he calls?

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JKDStudent:
$100 in the pot, you win 80% of the time. We're going to make the following assumptions:

1) He calls every time.
2) If the third heart comes, you will check, he will bet, you will call, because he MAY be bluffing. However, for the purposes of simplified calculuations, he has the flush every single time (which illustrates that even with this worst-case scenario, our bet STILL has positive EV)
3) The third heart will come 20% of the time (it will actually happen slightly less, but 20% is fine for this example)
4) He will fold when the third heart doesn't come.

Not betting:
$100*.8 - $10*.2 = $78 EV. (The $10*.2 means we call his river bet)

Betting:
$120*.8 - $20*.2 = $92 EV

I never said that folding isn't MORE +EV for us. Of course it is. But betting is in NO WAY -EV. Sure, it's a reduction from the absolute best-case scenario, which is him folding, but that's not how EV is determined to be positive or negative. Positive means that you gain money from a decision, negative means that you lose money. Negative does NOT mean that it's not as good as an alternative.

Can people really be this dim? I can see that playing poker is a +EV move if people are this bad at math.

Love,
Kevin

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Which brings us up to date.

A) You have been antagonistic, belligerent, and condescending throughout the discussion.

B) You obviously do not remember your own statements. You very clearly stated that the opponent's call gains him $16 in EV. I have shown that to be untrue. You claimed that a bet is -EV and that we cannot both have positive expectation. That has been shown to be untrue. You then stated that if he calls the bet, we lose $14. This is not only untrue, but it contradicts your own statements.

C) You backtracked to say that you were saying a called bet simply reduced EV in comparison to the opponent folding. However, you very clearly made the argument that in No-Limit, you can make a bet that is a +EV situation for you regardless of whether the opponent calls or folds. That implies that the limit bet is NOT +EV if he calls. We have shown THAT is not the case.

D) Even if you had any credibility after all that, you would have ruined it by stating that limit hold 'em does not exist in Europe. Such a declaration only continues your tradition of stating things as fact when you obviously have no idea what you are talking about.

F) Your grade in this thread.
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  #114  
Old 07-30-2005, 04:25 PM
pokerplayer28 pokerplayer28 is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 6
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

Very nice post but youre arguing over his POV and youre not going to change his mind.

his POV
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After the bet is placed if your opponent gains by calling than you lose. If your ev goes from 7(fold) to 4(call) the call could be considered -3EV for you

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other posters POV
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This sentence is meangingless. Something can't be negative "compared to something else". We are discussing a value. It is either less than zero (negative) or it isn't. 4 isn't "negative compared to 7" just because it is smaller.

If he folds, our EV is positive (because we win the money in the pot and there is more than $0 in there). If calls, our EV is still positive (because we usually win the pot plus his bet and occasionally lose a few bets, so we come out ahead on average). However, our EV is higher if he folds than if he calls, so we would perfer he does that.

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whos right? whos wrong? who cares?
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  #115  
Old 07-30-2005, 07:33 PM
beernutz beernutz is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: gulf coast
Posts: 908
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

Thank you. I was thinking about going back through all his previous posts and pointing out the misstatements, backtracks, and other nonsense, and also thinking about what a PIA that would've been and lo and behold you aced it.

nh

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Not sure what you were replying to but it wasn't the above. Go back and trying reading my posts instead of replying to what you assume I was saying.

The original poster to whom I was replying stated that he wanted a call because it improved his EV over not being called. I pointed out that being called reduced his EV - i.e. his EV FOR THE CALL was negative. Everyone seems to be jumped in and replying to a claim I never made which is why I called them (and you it would seem) dim.

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Let's review, shall we?

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Fuchida:
I play NL cash games. For some reason I tend to do worse at limit and it frustrates the hell out of me when I can't blow someone off their obvious draw or at least make them pay far too much for it. I also have to take small bites out of a fish rather than sucking him in to losing his stack in one go and making room for the next victim, I mean player Probably frustration = tilt and explains why I don't do as well at limit.

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evans075:
Why wouldn't you want someone to pay you off with a drawing hand with your made hand. If someone is drawing to their flush he has a 35% chance of hitting it, that means 65% of the time you win. This is especially nice when the drawer isn't getting the odds to call. So for every 3 times I'm against someone drawing to the flush, they pay me off twice to me paying them off once. Thats +EV bro.


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Fuchida:
In the rather strange example you give above, you may win 65% of the time compared to 35% but that is completely irrelevant. What is important is the odds the chaser has in relation to his bet. If there is $100 in the pot on the turn and you bet $10, he is getting 11-1 to call with his flush draw. He will only hit 1 in 5 times but he is getting 11-1 on his bet. A very good investment for him. If you have the made hand, the $110 in the pot is currently yours and you are laying odds like a bookmaker to someone with only a 20% shot at it but you are giving him 11-1

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JKDStudent:
This is wrong.

There is $100 in the pot, and on the turn it is heads up. We have the best hand, our opponent is on a flush draw that will come in less than 20% of the time. If the hand goes to showdown with no further betting, our EV is $80, opponent's is $20.

We bet $10. Opponent is getting 11:1 odds on his call. He only needs roughly 4:1, so he calls. As he should. Does this mean our bet is wrong? NO! We're still winning this 80% of the time. That means of the $20 that just went into the pot (our bet and his call), $16 of it belongs to us. The call is +EV for the flush draw because of the size of the pot, but it's MORE +EV for us.

Also, let's say you put your opponent on a flush draw in that same pot. We bet $10, he calls. The third of a suit comes on the river. We check, he bets $10. We are getting 13:1 to call. That means that we only have to have the best hand less than 8% of the time for the call to be +EV. Can you say with 92% certainty that he was on a flush draw? But in no-limit, he can bluff you off the pot much more easily.

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Fuchida:
OMG! I am starting to understand why some people like limit if this is how they think.

$100 in the pot. If you bet $10 in the turn and he calls, then 20% of the time he will lose $10 and 80% of the time he will win $120. On average his call has a +EV of $16 (120 - 4x10)/5. Therefore you have negative EV. I hope you don't think you both have +EV.

I agree that in limit you still have to bet because even bad odds are better than infinite odds. You are effectively reducing the size of your negative EV. However, in NL, you can control the bet and give yourself a +EV situation regardless of the drawing player's actions.

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bobbyi:
Due to the $100 already in the pot, you do both have +EV. If there is $100 in the pot and his EV is $16, where do you think the rest of the money is going? Do the magical equity fairies come down and take it away?

[/ QUOTE ]

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Fuchida:
For some reason I am struggling to get this simple concept through

The previous poster was suggesting his EV increases if the chaser calls the bet. That isn't the case. The player with the made hand has negative EV on the chasers call compared to a fold. In Limit the bettor wants a fold, not a call.

If the caller calls the $10 he improves his chance of gaining the pot and therefore reduces the chance of the made hand. If the chaser folds, the made hand gets 100% of the pot

In NL, you can set the bet so that you either get the pot or the chaser makes a -EV call. I don't think I can spell this out any more simply so if it still doesn't get through the limited limit brain, I will just give up.

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JKDStudent:
...are... are you serious? A little piece of me just died inside reading this.

There's $100 in the pot. He has a flush draw, which means he will LOSE 80% of the time. Not win. WE are making the $16 on the bet and call.

Yes, two people can have positive EV. Because of money already in the pot.

Just... wow. Wow.

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Fuchida:
Can people really be this dim? Yes, you get $10 if he calls and doesn't make his draw but you lose $110 if he does make it. I can see that a career in professional poker was a +EV move if people are really this bad at math.

OK, last time - with all the math

100 in the pot plus 10 from you

If he folds, you get $110 on average

If he calls, you get 120 80% of the time and nothing 20% of the time. Therefore on average you get (120x4)/5 = $96

Therefore, if he calls, you lose $14.

How can this not be any clearer???

Please explain, with the supporting math rather than the usual, 'just because it is', how you gain money if he calls?

[/ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
JKDStudent:
$100 in the pot, you win 80% of the time. We're going to make the following assumptions:

1) He calls every time.
2) If the third heart comes, you will check, he will bet, you will call, because he MAY be bluffing. However, for the purposes of simplified calculuations, he has the flush every single time (which illustrates that even with this worst-case scenario, our bet STILL has positive EV)
3) The third heart will come 20% of the time (it will actually happen slightly less, but 20% is fine for this example)
4) He will fold when the third heart doesn't come.

Not betting:
$100*.8 - $10*.2 = $78 EV. (The $10*.2 means we call his river bet)

Betting:
$120*.8 - $20*.2 = $92 EV

I never said that folding isn't MORE +EV for us. Of course it is. But betting is in NO WAY -EV. Sure, it's a reduction from the absolute best-case scenario, which is him folding, but that's not how EV is determined to be positive or negative. Positive means that you gain money from a decision, negative means that you lose money. Negative does NOT mean that it's not as good as an alternative.

Can people really be this dim? I can see that playing poker is a +EV move if people are this bad at math.

Love,
Kevin

[/ QUOTE ]

Which brings us up to date.

A) You have been antagonistic, belligerent, and condescending throughout the discussion.

B) You obviously do not remember your own statements. You very clearly stated that the opponent's call gains him $16 in EV. I have shown that to be untrue. You claimed that a bet is -EV and that we cannot both have positive expectation. That has been shown to be untrue. You then stated that if he calls the bet, we lose $14. This is not only untrue, but it contradicts your own statements.

C) You backtracked to say that you were saying a called bet simply reduced EV in comparison to the opponent folding. However, you very clearly made the argument that in No-Limit, you can make a bet that is a +EV situation for you regardless of whether the opponent calls or folds. That implies that the limit bet is NOT +EV if he calls. We have shown THAT is not the case.

D) Even if you had any credibility after all that, you would have ruined it by stating that limit hold 'em does not exist in Europe. Such a declaration only continues your tradition of stating things as fact when you obviously have no idea what you are talking about.

F) Your grade in this thread.

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  #116  
Old 07-31-2005, 02:20 AM
pankwindu pankwindu is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 1
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

I believe the point he was trying to make was expressed a bit more eloquently (and perhaps authoritatively) by David Sklansky in The Theory of Poker, Chapter 3, Example 2 (the fundamental theorem of poker).
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  #117  
Old 07-31-2005, 02:33 AM
Voltron87 Voltron87 is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: checkraising young children
Posts: 1,326
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

Are there actually people on this forum who want their opponents calling a 10$ bet in a 100$ pot with a flush draw, with one card to come, assuming the action is final and you have a made hand?

Oh my God



people, if its a headsup pot, and its +EV for him (getting 11-1 on a nut flush draw is very +EV), it is -EV for you. This is a zero sum game, how can anyone not see that? One person's gain is anothers loss.
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  #118  
Old 07-31-2005, 02:44 AM
SCfuji SCfuji is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 467
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

an old, wise, tall man once told me that deep stack NL > limit > restricted buyin NL(unless of course the stacks become really really deep) along with the idea that there is a greater number of weaker players and $ to be won in limit.
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  #119  
Old 07-31-2005, 02:46 AM
SCfuji SCfuji is offline
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Posts: 467
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

do you tilt when you push a floped set and a flush draw calls and hits one of his 6 or 7 outs or whatever on the river?
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  #120  
Old 07-31-2005, 02:46 AM
M0n3y0nf1r3 M0n3y0nf1r3 is offline
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Posts: 27
Default Re: Why choose Limit over No-Limit?

Easier to multi table Limit then No limit!!!
-Andrew
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