u/AggravatingPower3073

Will I be charged delivery fee if substitutions make my order below minimum order for free delivery?

I actually have two questions.

I just made an order at Walmart, and according to the DoorDash app, orders over $35 are exempt from delivery fees. Additionally, there is a Mother's Day special, where orders at Walmart over $55 get 40% (promo code MDAY40).

So I filled my cart up until the total before taxes is just over $55. My total after taxes and the promotion came out to be just under $38. However, there were several items that the app says are likely out of stock, and it prompted me to choose a course of action for if that happens. For all of them I chose "don't substitute."

Does anyone know if, in the case that there are items that are unavailable, I would be charged the delivery fee when the total goes below $35? And if I would still have the discount?

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u/AggravatingPower3073 — 4 days ago
▲ 39 r/geegees

Got bored and decided to calculate some stats. Contrary to popular belief, uOttawa does not admit "everybody."

Fall 2023:

  • Undergrad applications — enrolments: 83,063 — 9,405
  • Rate: 11.32%
  • Grad applications — enrolments: 16,552 — 2,721
  • Rate: 16.44%

Fall 2024:

  • Undergrad applications — enrolments: 82,178 — 9,407
  • Rate: 11.44%
  • Grad applications — enrolments: 11,213 — 1,658
  • Rate: 14.79%

Fall 2025:

  • Undergrad applications — enrolments: 77,605 — 10,638
  • Rate: 13.71%
  • Grad applications - enrolments: 9,594 — 1,664
  • Rate: 17.34%

EDIT:

I mistakenly put "admissions" in the title when the stats really are enrolment stats. It's too late to change the title, but the data still stands.

Edit #2:

Turns out the uOttawa website used "admissions" so...

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u/AggravatingPower3073 — 10 days ago
▲ 4 r/LSAT

I was wondering if there are any stats available on LSAT questions where the proportion of test-takers that picked one particular answer choice exceeds the proportion of those that picked the right answer choice.

I just ran into one question like this on 7Sage (only relying on their analytics of course), and even though I know those are rare (as this was the first instance so far) it really concerned in terms of my ability to accurately answer those questions on test day.

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u/AggravatingPower3073 — 10 days ago