Currently, there is no official way to multiclass between several subclasses of the same class. In other words, the rules do not give the option to stack subclasses of the same class.
Can you multiclass into different domains?
Multiclassing is designed solely for taking different classes. For example, you can be a fighter/rogue, but not a rogue/rogue. That said, I would talk to your DM. It may be reasonable, for example, to mix and match some of the domain powers at their discretion.
How do you do multi-class classification?
Approach –
- Load dataset from source.
- Split the dataset into “training” and “test” data.
- Train Decision tree, SVM, and KNN classifiers on the training data.
- Use the above classifiers to predict labels for the test data.
- Measure accuracy and visualise classification.
Can You multiclass in the same class with a different subclass?
A different subclass is not a new class. Per the rules, as Mellie and Bobob pointed out, this is not possible. As a DM, I would not allow multiclassing into the same class with a different sub. I would allow a homebrew subclass that pulls in bits and pieces of each that thematically fits your concept however.
Can You multiclass the same class twice in 5e?
The way that 5e works, each class has a sub class that dictates a heap of class features. The question here is generally, can a character of a specific class take levels in that same class in order to gain access to the low level features of another sub-class.
What’s the difference between multiclassing and multi level?
What Is Multiclassing? Multiclassing is simply taking one or more levels in a class that is not the class you started with.
Can You multiclass into different classes in Pathfinder?
It seems to be generally agreed on the internet/paizo forums/etc. that you cannot multiclass into the same class – as when you level, you choose to either advance a level in an existing class or gain a level in a new class, and a different archetype doesn’t count as a different class so isn’t “new”. Could you address that argument in your answer?