Good point. Also, the last two solutions do not work well if the number of array elements are odd. For instance, if we have 11 unique numbers it 5 should be A, 5 B and 1 dash. But both of them print 6 "A"s and 4 "B"s and no dash. I tried to play around with the ranges but could not resolve it. I think 50% is the maximum that we want to go to be able to divide the population of numbers into two categories. Therefore, I am not worry about 75% or higher unless there is another use for this little script.


In reply to Re^3: Top and bottom 10 percent elements of an array by sesemin
in thread Top and bottom 10 percent elements of an array by sesemin

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