Posted by ashamael on 5/15/2016 7:36:00 PM (view original):
Posted by robusk on 5/14/2016 9:46:00 PM (view original):
Posted by ashamael on 5/14/2016 5:04:00 PM (view original):
The thing that confuses me is that generally a season is referred to by the final number. The 96 bulls, for example, were the 95-96 bulls, not the 96-97 ones. It took me a minute to figure out which season was which because of that.
Oh, I could have done it either way. The data source says 15-16 for example, and I have to pick one. So I opted for the year that the draft occurred. It would have confused someone either way.
that's cool. Maybe just edit the post where you list them and put 51-52 for the first guy... that should make it 100% clear.
So it is pretty easy to do it listing both parts of the season (51-52 is an example) and it takes more data massage to do it the way I do it. However, if you want this pasted in Excel and put it in that way, then you can't manipulate the data as well. What I mean is that, say I put in 51-52 for one guy or double season for everyone, then I can't filter it to be like show me every guy who debuted between 1974 and 1975 (for a double season progressive) or something like from 1959 - 1969 (for a decade draft league). Excel doesn't understand that 51-52 is a year or a number but it can work with something like 1951.