Okay, so today I wanted to mess around with something called the “Riley Rule.” I’d heard about it a bit, and it sounded interesting, so I figured, why not give it a shot?

Getting Started
First things first, I needed to actually understand what this Riley Rule thing was all about. I did some digging, reading whatever I could find. Basically, It’s about calculating probabilities for different scenarios.
Putting it into Practice
I decided to start that by creating a sample dataset. This was important so I could calculate the probabilities, at first I was confused. So I started to follow an example from a website. I spend about one hour to set up the environment and try to get some data.
Run into problems
Honestly, The beginning I tried to make it work, that really made me almost give up, Because I did not find any instructions to do it. Eventually, I found that’s because the Riley Rule needs to be manually calculated and did not really need any coding. I’ve switched to some simple calculation, It was just some basic adding, dividing, you know, the usual stuff.
Finally get the result
I tested three times and refined data. So after a bunch of calculations and double-checking my work, I finally got some results. It was pretty satisfying to see the numbers line up and make sense. Even though it was a small thing, it felt good to actually apply something I’d just learned and see it work out.