From 7e4d75759c13da6df3fa80f28a310dc780acc03c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Yuchen Pei Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2019 15:50:37 +0100 Subject: added table of contents --- posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.md') diff --git a/posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.md b/posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.md index 533835d..db03a3c 100644 --- a/posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.md +++ b/posts/2019-03-13-a-tail-of-two-densities.md @@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ where $p$ and $q$ are the laws of the outputs of a randomised functions on two very similar inputs. Moreover, to make matters even simpler, only three situations need to be considered: -1. (General case) $q$ is in the form of $q(y) = p(y + \Delta)$ for some bounded $\Delta$. +1. (General case) $q$ is in the form of $q(y) = p(y + \Delta)$ for some bounded constant $\Delta$. 2. (Compositions) $p$ and $q$ are combinatorial or sequential compositions of some simpler $p_i$'s and $q_i$'s respectively 3. (Subsampling) $p$ and $q$ are mixtures / averages of some simpler $p_i$'s and $q_i$'s respectively -- cgit v1.2.3