I noticed you reverted an edit I made at New Hampshire House of Representatives, changing "largest" back to "smallest". Maybe I'm being dense but can you explain this to me? My understanding is that NH has a lot of representatives for a small population, which means that representative-to-population ratio would be large, since the numerator (representatives) is large compared to the denominator (population). For example, in the next paragraph, it says NH has the largest lower house of any state (but it certainly does not have the largest population). DrIdiot ( talk) 13:04, 2 July 2023 (UTC)
I noticed you reverted an edit I made at New Hampshire House of Representatives, changing "largest" back to "smallest". Maybe I'm being dense but can you explain this to me? My understanding is that NH has a lot of representatives for a small population, which means that representative-to-population ratio would be large, since the numerator (representatives) is large compared to the denominator (population). For example, in the next paragraph, it says NH has the largest lower house of any state (but it certainly does not have the largest population). DrIdiot ( talk) 13:04, 2 July 2023 (UTC)