@@ -527,14 +527,18 @@ However, for reading convenience, most of the examples show sorted sequences.
527527 The default *method * is "exclusive" and is used for data sampled from
528528 a population that can have more extreme values than found in the
529529 samples. The portion of the population falling below the *i-th * of
530- *m * data points is computed as ``i / (m + 1) ``.
530+ *m * sorted data points is computed as ``i / (m + 1) ``. Given nine
531+ sample values, the method sorts them and assigns the following
532+ percentiles: 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%.
531533
532534 Setting the *method * to "inclusive" is used for describing population
533- data or for samples that include the extreme points. The minimum
534- value in *dist * is treated as the 0th percentile and the maximum
535- value is treated as the 100th percentile. The portion of the
536- population falling below the *i-th * of *m * data points is computed as
537- ``(i - 1) / (m - 1) ``.
535+ data or for samples that are known to include the most extreme values
536+ from the population. The minimum value in *dist * is treated as the 0th
537+ percentile and the maximum value is treated as the 100th percentile.
538+ The portion of the population falling below the *i-th * of *m * sorted
539+ data points is computed as ``(i - 1) / (m - 1) ``. Given 11 sample
540+ values, the method sorts them and assigns the following percentiles:
541+ 0%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, 100%.
538542
539543 If *dist * is an instance of a class that defines an
540544 :meth: `~inv_cdf ` method, setting *method * has no effect.
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