If I have 2 variables, A and B (A+B = 1), and i wanted to see the effect of varying these two on a quantity Q then i could just do an experiment where i go:
A: B
1: 0
0.8: 0.2
0.6: 0.4
0.4: 0.6
0.2: 0.8
0: 1
and measure Q for each ratio (and choose the ratio which gives the best Q).
But how do i go about it when i have 3 variables, A, B and C, and want to set up an experiment that will find the optimum ratio of A:B:C which gives an optimum value of Q?
How do i make sure i don't miss any ratios of A:B:C?
Thanks for any help
A: B
1: 0
0.8: 0.2
0.6: 0.4
0.4: 0.6
0.2: 0.8
0: 1
and measure Q for each ratio (and choose the ratio which gives the best Q).
But how do i go about it when i have 3 variables, A, B and C, and want to set up an experiment that will find the optimum ratio of A:B:C which gives an optimum value of Q?
How do i make sure i don't miss any ratios of A:B:C?
Thanks for any help