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Hardcore Maths Question

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Algorithms
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  • J Jon Sagara

    N(1) = 2519 N(2) = 2519 + 2520 = 5039 N(3) = 2519 + 2520 + 2520 = 7559 N(4) = 2519 + 2520 + 2520 + 2520 = 10079 ... N(n) = 2519 + (n - 1)*(2520) No idea what the heck it means, though. Care to enlighten us mathematically-challenged folks?

    Jon Sagara When I grow up, I'm changing my name to Joe Kickass! My Site | My Blog | My Articles

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    User 12346520
    wrote on last edited by
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    • J Judah Gabriel Himango

      Quartz... wrote:

      It's the journey, not the destination

      Very true. I actually had fun writing a little piece of code to solve it, though, so it was the journey even still. :) I added some more code that added each match to a list box on a Windows Form. Then, after seeing how it froze up the UI, I did it on a background thread. Still, the UI thread would get flooded with matches, almost preventing it from painting, so I further chagned the code to only update during app idle. Voila, cool little WinForms program that solves it. :cool:

      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Messianic Instrumentals (with audio) The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

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      • L leppie

        Some other interesting and useless observations:

        1*2*3*4*5*6*7*8*9 is divisible by 2520 = 144
        2520 is divisible by 2 * 3 * 5 * 7 = 12 (product of prime 1 - 9)
        4 * 6 * 8 * 9 is divisible by 144 = 12 (product of 'non' prime 1 - 9)

        :doh:

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        • L leppie

          Jon Sagara wrote:

          N(n) = 2519 + (n - 1)*(2520)

          N(n) = (n * 2520) - 1 = 2520n - 1

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          • P Paul Conrad

            Judah Himango wrote:

            Voila, cool little WinForms program that solves it. :cool:

            That's cool. Mine is just a plain boring console app :->


            I'd like to help but I am too lazy to Google it for you.

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            • P Paul Conrad

              There was a question of if there were more number, yes, there are. Here is a modification of your code that shows others :)

              #include using namespace std;

              int main()
              {
              int start = 1;
              int divisor = 10;
              while ( start <1000000 ) // Or whatevery you want in signed 32-bit range
              {
              while (divisor >= 2)
              {
              if (start % divisor == divisor - 1)
              {
              divisor--;
              }
              else
              {
              start++;
              divisor = 10;
              }
              }

                  cout<
              
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              • P Paul Conrad

                leppie wrote:

                So there are more than one of these. I wonder if its some kind of series...

                Take a look at the modification of Judah's code that I posted. Your number is one of the numbers that come up :)


                I'd like to help but I am too lazy to Google it for you.

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                • J Judah Gabriel Himango

                  leppie wrote:

                  I wonder if its some kind of series...

                  It appears to be every 2520.

                  Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Messianic Instrumentals (with audio) The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

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                  • R Raj Lal

                    yes thats true there are many , but if you think it might take a day to get the solution , without any computer help, but its worth

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                    • P Paul Conrad

                      Judah Himango wrote:

                      It appears to be every 2520.

                      It is. Modifying the your code that I modified and posted, shows this to be true :)


                      I'd like to help but I am too lazy to Google it for you.

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                      • R Raj Lal

                        Judah Himango wrote:

                        I kind of cheated though

                        well thats ok , and of course there are more numbers but the fun is when you deduce how to do it It's the journey, not the destination

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                        • J Judah Gabriel Himango

                          Provided I've understood the question correctly, I think I've solved it. I kind of cheated though; I wrote a C# program that solves this:

                                  int start = 1;
                                  int divisor = 10;
                                  while (divisor >= 2)
                                  {
                                      if (start % divisor == divisor - 1)
                                      {
                                          divisor--;
                                      }
                                      else
                                      {
                                          start++;
                                          divisor = 10;
                                      }
                                  }
                          

                          Soon as that loop exits, you've got your number, which happens to be 2519.

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                          • J Judah Gabriel Himango

                            yeah yeah :) Hey, I worked for it at least. :) *edit* oooh, misunderstood you there leppie. I though you were chiding me for solving it with code rather than brain. :) Yes, there are other numbers, it appears every 2520 iteration matches the criteria.

                            Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Messianic Instrumentals (with audio) The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

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                            • L leppie

                              Judah Himango wrote:

                              I kind of cheated.

                              He did say "find a number" :) So there are more than one of these. I wonder if its some kind of series...

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                              • L leppie

                                2701439 last 4 digits by deduction, rest trial and error guess with 3/9 rule. :)

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                                • A Andrew Bleakley

                                  It's not a mexican is it ?

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                                  • R Raj Lal

                                    Ok lets me be the first to ask a maths question Find a number which 1. divided by 10 gives a remainder 9 2. divided by 9 gives remainder 8 --- --- so on till divided by 2 gives a remainder 1 Any one ?

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                                    • L leppie

                                      Here's a wild guess: 123456789 ? [edit] ok I got the 9 bit :p [edit] -- modified at 18:37 Wednesday 26th July, 2006

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