Err no. 0 would be a shift from 1/2 to either left or right depending on what direction you wanted to use. 1 maps to a left or right shift that would be the opposite of 0. This means that -1 would map to either -1/4 or -3/4 depending on what you did — Umonsarmon
Ok here we go remember we start at 1/2 and then shift either left or right by half. Lets say that 1 is left and 0 is right.
1 goes to 1/4 (i.e halfway between 0 and 1/2
-1 just gets represented as the key -1/4
0 right shifts from 1/2 to 3/4 — Umonsarmon
If we have the sequence 1/4 + 1/8 + 1/16 etc etc no matter how many numbers I remove from that list the product will be rational. — Umonsarmon
Now if the sum is a rational number then at no point in the sequence 1/4+1/8 etc can the sum be an irrational number otherwise the sum of the whole sequence will be irrational. — Umonsarmon
The proof works if you understand it, what you've suggested is complete nonsence with regards to the sum you posted — Umonsarmon
(1) The sequence contains irrationals. The infinite sum remains rational.
(2) The sequence can consist only of rationals. The infinite sum can be irrational.
(3) The sequence can consist only of rationals, it can be strictly increasing or decreasing, but not converge in the rationals. (see 2)
(4) The sequence can consist only of irrationals, it can be strictly increasing or decreasing, but converge to a rational. — fdrake
0.1 would be 1/2 to the right and 1/2 to the left to give us 1/4
1.1 would be 1/2 to the right and again 1/2 to the right to give us, again, 1/4
Both 0.1 and 1.1 are mapping on to the same fraction 1/4. — TheMadFool
There isn't a third possibility here. — Wittgenstein
… like Sq root 2, which was discovered to be irrational by the Ancient Greeks, much to their consternation. — unenlightened
Now this is equal to 1/2 + sum of the positive fractions - sum of negative fractions ok.
This gives 1/2 = sum of positive fractions - sum of negative fractions.
Now the sum 1/4 + 1/8 + 1/16 etc sums to a 1/2
I hope you would agree that no matter how I reorder this sum then it always = 1/2 ok — Umonsarmon
01 goes first right which means it goes 1/2 the distance between 1/2 and 1 which are points on a line to first give 3/4. Then it left shifts halfway to the next point which is 1/2. This means it sits halfway between
1/2 and 3/4 which is 5/8. This value is halfway between 1/2 and 3/4. This is why I would normally use a square with a line going halfway down the middle. Each shift creates a new line and you only move halfway to your next line ok — Umonsarmon
It can be easily shown that the series is convergent by Cauchy's criterion (yes, I just looked up the name - hey, I am three decades out of practice, you guys should be doing this :)) — SophistiCat
The series can converge to any real number in the interval [0, 1]. — SophistiCat
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