Hi alluv001,
Thanks for providing an example. I think I understand where you're getting tripped up. Sufficient will always go on the left of the arrow, and necessary will always go to the right, when you are diagramming a stimulus. I think the tricky part for you here is making chain relationships when that requires you to generate a contrapositive. So in #4 on 2-11, we get the following relationships:
Sufficient
Necessary
RLN
NBU
NBU
TSIO
From this, we can see that the common piece is NBU, and so we can create a chain around that element. The chain is easy on this one; we just put the two together, and nothing needs to change direction:
RLN
NBU
TSIO
For #5, it is a little bit trickier. We get these relationships:
Sufficient
Necessary
UM
C
L
PC
I
notC
We can see that the common element here is C, but in one case it is negated, and in the other it isn't. Additionally, unlike in #4 where the common element was sufficient in one statement and necessary in the other, here the C is necessary in each statement. This means that in order to connect the two conditional statements, we'll need to take the contrapositive of one. So here, we'll take the contrapositive for the first statement, to negate the C to create a common element and to get the common element on different sides of the arrow:
notC
notUM
Now we can combine the common elements from the first and third conditional statements, using this new contrapositive. It's the same thing as in #4 - just connect the common element, starting with the conditional statement that has the common element as the necessary condition:
I
notC
notUM
Does that help? The trick is recognizing when you need to take the contrapositive of one of the statements. Once you do that, it should be straightforward to create the chain.