After nearly reaching 300 competitors in Newmarket this weekend, could somebody redo this stat?
edit: I figured out how to run Kit's code. Here's all single day competitions with at least 150 competitors.
You literally solved the white-orange edge, took it out, and solved the green-orange pair as you would in CFOP. Then for L5E, you oriented them, placed the white-orange edge, and did a U-perm.
Wouldn't it have been a lot easier to just leave the white-orange edge solved?
Edit: Ninja'd a bit.
This isn't a parity case, and if you're using Yau, you've done something wrong.
However, holding green on front and yellow on top, do b' r' D' r U' r' D r U b.
I meant something like this
http://www.jaapsch.net/puzzles/images/square1/shapes.gif
It shows what case leads to what case, so like O-O + opp/opp -> Z-Z + adj/adj -> adj-adj
This doesn't look like it would be very helpful for a beginner. You don't state which AUF/ADF to do the algs, or the AUF/ADF between consecutive parts. Nor does it say how the algs are derived, for example why for W-W you should do N-N, the adj-adj. A map would be more effective than a list...