OEIS/A322469: Difference between revisions
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imported>Gfis finished? |
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Offset: 1,1 | Offset: 1,1 | ||
Comments: The sequence is the flattened form of | Comments: The sequence is the flattened form of an irregular table T(i, j) | ||
(c.f. the example below) which has rows í >= 1 consisting of | (c.f. the example below) which has rows í >= 1 consisting of subsequences | ||
of varying length as defined by the following algorithm: | |||
T(i, 1) := 4i - 1; j := 1; | T(i, 1) := 4i - 1; j := 1; | ||
while T(i, j) divisible by 3 do | while T(i, j) divisible by 3 do | ||
Line 15: | Line 14: | ||
j := j + 2; | j := j + 2; | ||
end while | end while | ||
The algorithm | The algorithm successively replaces any factor 3 by a factor 2, | ||
and therefore it always stops. The first rows which are longer | |||
than any previous row are 1, 7, 61, 547, 4921 ... (A066443). | |||
Property: The sequence is a permutation of the natural numbers > 0. | Property: The sequence is a permutation of the natural numbers > 0. | ||
Proof: (Start) | Proof: (Start) | ||
The values in columns j | The values in the columns j of T for row indexes i of the form | ||
i = e * k + f, k >= 0, if such columns are present, have the following | |||
residues modulo some power of 2: | |||
j | Op. | Form of i | T(i, j) | j | Op. | Form of i | T(i, j) | Residues | Residues not yet covered | ||
--- | ---+------+ -------------+--------------+------------+------------------------- | ||
1 | | 1 | | 1 * k + 1 | 4 * k + 3 | 3 mod 4 | 0, 1, 2 mod 4 | ||
2 | /3 | | 2 | / 3 | 3 * k + 1 | 4 * k + 1 | 1 mod 4 | 0, 2, 4, 6 mod 8 | ||
3 | *2 | | 3 | * 2 | 3 * k + 1 | 8 * k + 2 | 2 mod 8 | 0, 4, 6 mod 8 | ||
4 | /3 | | 4 | / 3 | 9 * k + 7 | 8 * k + 6 | 6 mod 8 | 0, 4, 8, 12 mod 16 | ||
5 | *2 | | 5 | * 2 | 9 * k + 7 | 16 * k + 12 | 12 mod 16 | 0, 4, 8 mod 16 | ||
6 | /3 | | 6 | / 3 | 27 * k + 7 | 16 * k + 4 | 4 mod 16 | 0, 8, 16, 24 mod 32 | ||
7 | *2 | | 7 | * 2 | 27 * k + 7 | 32 * k + 8 | 8 mod 32 | 0, 16, 24 mod 32 | ||
8 | /3 | | 8 | / 3 | 81 * k + 61 | 32 * k + 24 | 24 mod 32 | 0, 16, 32, 48 mod 64 | ||
9 | *2 | | 9 | * 2 | 81 * k + 61 | 64 * k + 48 | 48 mod 64 | 0, 16, 32 mod 64 | ||
...| | ...| ... | e * k + f | g * k + m | m mod g | 0, ... | ||
The variables in the last, general line can be computed from the | |||
the operations in the algorithm. They are the following: | |||
e = 3^floor(j / 2) | |||
f = A066443(floor(j / 4)) with A066443(0) = 0, A066443(n) = 9 * A066443(n-1) - 2 | |||
g = 2^floor((j + 3) / 2) | |||
m = 2^floor((j - 1) / 4) * A084101(j + 1 mod 4) with A084101(0..3) = (1, 3, 3, 1) | |||
The residues in each column and therefore the | The residues m in each column and therefore the T(i, j) are all disjoint. | ||
and | For numbers which contain a sufficiently high power of 3, the length of | ||
the rows grows beyond any limit, and the numbers containing any power of 2 | |||
will finally be covered | |||
(End) | (End) | ||
The lengths grow slowly; for example, the first number not in a(1..10^7) is 65536. | |||
Example: | Example: | ||
i| j=1 2 3 4 5 6 | i | j = 1 2 3 4 5 6 | ||
----+-------------------- | |||
1 | 1 | 3 1 2 | ||
2 | 2 | 7 | ||
3 | 3 | 11 | ||
4 | 4 | 15 5 10 | ||
5 | 5 | 19 | ||
6 | 6 | 23 | ||
7 | 7 | 27 9 18 6 12 4 | ||
Prog: ( | Prog: | ||
use integer; my $n = 1; my $i = 1; | (PARI) n=1; for(i=1,100, a=4*i-1; print1(a); while(a%3==0, a=a/3;\ | ||
print1(" ", a); a=a*2; print1(" ", a)); print;) | |||
(Perl) use integer; my $n = 1; my $i = 1; | |||
while ($i < 1000) { | while ($i < 1000) { | ||
my $an = 4 * $i - 1; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; | my $an = 4 * $i - 1; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; | ||
Line 66: | Line 72: | ||
$an *= 2; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; | $an *= 2; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; | ||
} $i ++; | } $i ++; | ||
} | } | ||
Crossrefs: | Crossrefs: Cf. A066443, A084101 | ||
Keywords: nonn,tabf,easy | Keywords: nonn,tabf,easy | ||
Author: Georg Fischer | Author: Georg Fischer |
Revision as of 00:03, 9 December 2018
Name: Permutation of the natural numbers: Step by 4 and replace factors 3 by 2. 3, 1, 2, 7, 11, 15, 5, 10, 19, 23, 27, 9, 18, 6, 12, 4, 8, 31, 35, 39, 13, 26, 43, 47, 51, 17, 34, 55, 59, 63, 21, 42, 14, 28, 67, 71, 75, 25, 50, 79, 83, 87, 29, 58, 91, 95, 99, 33, 66, 22, 44, 103, 107, 111, 37, 74 Offset: 1,1 Comments: The sequence is the flattened form of an irregular table T(i, j) (c.f. the example below) which has rows í >= 1 consisting of subsequences of varying length as defined by the following algorithm: T(i, 1) := 4i - 1; j := 1; while T(i, j) divisible by 3 do T(i, j + 1) := T(i, j) / 3; T(i, j + 2) := T(i, j + 1) * 2; j := j + 2; end while The algorithm successively replaces any factor 3 by a factor 2, and therefore it always stops. The first rows which are longer than any previous row are 1, 7, 61, 547, 4921 ... (A066443). Property: The sequence is a permutation of the natural numbers > 0. Proof: (Start) The values in the columns j of T for row indexes i of the form i = e * k + f, k >= 0, if such columns are present, have the following residues modulo some power of 2: j | Op. | Form of i | T(i, j) | Residues | Residues not yet covered ---+------+ -------------+--------------+------------+------------------------- 1 | | 1 * k + 1 | 4 * k + 3 | 3 mod 4 | 0, 1, 2 mod 4 2 | / 3 | 3 * k + 1 | 4 * k + 1 | 1 mod 4 | 0, 2, 4, 6 mod 8 3 | * 2 | 3 * k + 1 | 8 * k + 2 | 2 mod 8 | 0, 4, 6 mod 8 4 | / 3 | 9 * k + 7 | 8 * k + 6 | 6 mod 8 | 0, 4, 8, 12 mod 16 5 | * 2 | 9 * k + 7 | 16 * k + 12 | 12 mod 16 | 0, 4, 8 mod 16 6 | / 3 | 27 * k + 7 | 16 * k + 4 | 4 mod 16 | 0, 8, 16, 24 mod 32 7 | * 2 | 27 * k + 7 | 32 * k + 8 | 8 mod 32 | 0, 16, 24 mod 32 8 | / 3 | 81 * k + 61 | 32 * k + 24 | 24 mod 32 | 0, 16, 32, 48 mod 64 9 | * 2 | 81 * k + 61 | 64 * k + 48 | 48 mod 64 | 0, 16, 32 mod 64 ...| ... | e * k + f | g * k + m | m mod g | 0, ... The variables in the last, general line can be computed from the the operations in the algorithm. They are the following: e = 3^floor(j / 2) f = A066443(floor(j / 4)) with A066443(0) = 0, A066443(n) = 9 * A066443(n-1) - 2 g = 2^floor((j + 3) / 2) m = 2^floor((j - 1) / 4) * A084101(j + 1 mod 4) with A084101(0..3) = (1, 3, 3, 1) The residues m in each column and therefore the T(i, j) are all disjoint. For numbers which contain a sufficiently high power of 3, the length of the rows grows beyond any limit, and the numbers containing any power of 2 will finally be covered (End) The lengths grow slowly; for example, the first number not in a(1..10^7) is 65536. Example: i | j = 1 2 3 4 5 6 ----+-------------------- 1 | 3 1 2 2 | 7 3 | 11 4 | 15 5 10 5 | 19 6 | 23 7 | 27 9 18 6 12 4 Prog: (PARI) n=1; for(i=1,100, a=4*i-1; print1(a); while(a%3==0, a=a/3;\ print1(" ", a); a=a*2; print1(" ", a)); print;) (Perl) use integer; my $n = 1; my $i = 1; while ($i < 1000) { my $an = 4 * $i - 1; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; while ($an % 3 == 0) { $an /= 3; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; $an *= 2; print "$n $an\n"; $n ++; } $i ++; }
Crossrefs: Cf. A066443, A084101 Keywords: nonn,tabf,easy Author: Georg Fischer