Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 643: Small Calculation Results and Small Work

"Let's start by determining the reference points in this room."

Writing the bat mark on the floor with white ink (chalk), a scream came from Sarah.

"Ahhh! I cleaned it because of you!

"Fair enough," he exclaims Sarah, walking towards the corner of the room. "This is the point of the vertical axis," he writes the bat mark on the floor in white ink.

Then he crosses the room diagonally and says, "This is the dot on the horizontal axis," and then writes the bat mark again.

This would have resulted in a bat stamp at three convenient locations in the room.

"From here on out, can I ask Gorgogo to help me? Can you draw the line straight from the reference point towards the vertical and horizontal axes? Of course, I don't mind if you write it in white ink."

"Hmm. I find it somewhat distracting to draw on this polished floor."

Even the blur turns to the rest of us while Gorgogo draws a straight line for us.

"First, we're going to rearrange the records on the floor based on the size of the farmland. Place the narrowest agricultural land at the reference point and the village manager of the widest agricultural land at the point on the horizontal axis. Then we line up in between. You don't have to do any special calculations. Arrange the tall one next to the village chief's field."

Recording of agricultural land in a row on the floor along the horizontal axis from the reference point is arranged in order of breadth, by hand.

If you just compare and arrange, you don't need to calculate as long as you can read the numbers.

Have parchment with the size of the farmland noted, walk from the reference point towards the point on the horizontal axis, and place parchment along the way if the number is smaller than the end. Put it at the end if it's big. Then back again to the parchment where the size of the farmland is noted.

It was a little surreal that large adults lined up in groups and did editorial work in elementary schools and circled around in circles like a line of poorly made factories, but we are serious.

By that time, Gorgogo had finished drawing the line, so he further requests that the horizontal axis line be scaled.

"Nevertheless, how do you wear it?

"Right. Why don't you split it ten, half of it?

"Well, that's not hard."

That's how I'm going to write the numbers on the scale here while I get Gorgogo to do the scale.

It's a simple arithmetic because there's a maximum and a minimum, and we just split it it by 20.

"All you have to do is rearrange the parchment on the farmland close to the numbers. It's pretty much fine."

The order of parchment paper on agricultural land is aligned, so all we have to do is drop to the numbers.

A little while later, the parchment on agricultural land, in order of breadth, created a scatter linear on the horizontal axis.

"So, what do we do now?

The work itself has been done so well that Sarah, who has gotten out of hand, asks for additional instructions.

"Just give me a minute. Gorgogo, are you ready for the scale?

"Oh, I put on the same scale that split 20."

"Okay. Then write the numbers in the same way. Just give me a minute."

On the vertical axis, the figures, divided by 20, based on the figures for the amount of the levy, will be written again.

This, too, is just arithmetic.

"Now do the same thing. Once you have the parchment on the farmland, now walk straight along the vertical axis. When you get around the tax figure, drop it."

A row of parchment paper scattered across the horizontal axis is now placed along a scatter of levies on the vertical axis.

Because it was an earlier task, the work was carried out in small portions.

"What is this?

There's no point in Paperino questioning it, either.

Now the "this" created with a little stack of work is this world's first scattering diagram.

"Simply put, a diagram summarizing the nature of the territory, right? At a glance, you can see which agricultural land is heavily taxed for its size and which is less taxed for its size."

"I see. Sure... no, but this is the thing..."

Apparently, Paperino, who received higher education in the church, understood what that meant.

I'm busy roaring and shaking my head.

"Oh, really?

"Well, isn't that a big deal? We didn't do anything difficult."

On the other hand, Sarah and Kilik, who helped with the work, seemed unable to hide their doubts.

Anyway, no one but me is doing the math.

It merely arranged parchment paper with figures on agricultural land according to the instructions.

I did the math, but I just wrote the scale numbers in simple arithmetic.

"Well, the essence is still to come. Easily draw a line from here."

Sew between scattered parchment paper and draw a single line at an approximate eye mass.

It's really a line to calculate and pull, but you wouldn't mind just giving me an approximate idea.

"Above this line is likely farmland that is doing well, farmland that is not doing well underneath. And on top of the line, the farthest farmland from the line is the farmland where there is something"

From now on, the meaning of "off value" in the scatter diagram will be explored.

There is something about agricultural land that stands out and shows different values.

"No, but the deputy! This is a big deal!

But Paperino, who regained his sanity, now exclaimed with excitement.

It changes the way churches manage their farmland, but it's hustling.

Personally, it would be helpful not to get too rampant because I'm neglectful of territorial circumstances, which is just a clueless way to get my eyes and nose based on records.

"No, I will, I will, I will!

The gentle attention was dismissed by Paperino, whose nose became rough like someone else's.

Hi. The race of priests seems to be the only people excited about logic and about numbers.