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Other cake protocols notoriously âtrimâ their pieces, ruining them.
Here is my proposal on how to divide a cake more politely.
One person divides the cake into as many pieces as there are cake-eaters such that divider would be happy with any piece. During the rest of this process the divider canât make claims, they will get whatâs left.
Everyone else claims a piece.
During the claiming process, anyone who hasnât claimed yet may respond to a claim with âAww, I really wanted that pieceâ.
If no-one does, then the person who made the claim can take that piece, itâs theirs now.
If someone does, the person who was making the claim might say either âThatâs OK, how about I take this one, then?â and make a new claim, or they might say âHow about splitsies?â
To the latter, people who have not yet made claims (except the original divider) can say âI want in on that, with this pieceâ (pointing to an unclaimed piece) to join the splitsies group or âthatâs OK, Iâm fine with another pieceâ to opt out.
So splitsies groups might form. Other people outside the splitsies groups can just take their claims and leave.
Everyone in the splitsies group divides their pieces into as many subpieces as there are people in the group.
Letâs say itâs A and B. A select one of Bâs halves, B selects one of Aâs halves, done. Fair.
If itâs three or more, circle up. Everyone selects a subpiece from their right-hand neighbor, then one from their neighborâs neighbor and so on. You can only select from the piece that person divided, not pieces they have selected from others. So standing to the left of the biggest piece would be pretty great, if it werenât for... the recursive âAww, I wanted thatâ! Splitsies within splitsies so youâll end up with just mush (albeit fairly divided mush)! Luckily you can always opt out of a splitsies group, even a sub-splitsies group, and just change your selection instead.
So the drawback of this protocol is that people might not dare to speak up if someone takes a piece they wanted, for fear of the chorus of eyerolls and sighs. But thatâs also a good thing. People who are just happy to take any piece rather than have to deal with shaved cake, trimmings, cake mush, divisions etcâor the social awkwardness of unusual algorithmsâcan do so.
I get that the math nerd version is a bit of a joke, people donât really deal with trimmings of trimmings of trimmings. But the proposal I present here is one you can hopefully do for real.
The problem I see is that what we traditonally consider to be âcakeâ is cut into âwedgeâ shapes, and typically has some kind of filling sandwiched between the sponge layers.
Oh, yeah, Going splitsies makes the cake completely gross. There is a huge incentive to not go splitsiesâitâs just a fallback in case the original divider does an awful job. But I mean compare to the original algorithmâs never-ending trimmings of shavings of slicings. Itâs a mess all over!