I'm doing a task in a subject were fib(0) is defined to = 1. But that can't be right? fib(0) is 0?
Program with fib(0) = 1; spits out fib(4) = 5
Program with fib(0) = 0; spits out fib(3) = 3
What is the correct definition?
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I'm doing a task in a subject were fib(0) is defined to = 1. But that can't be right? fib(0) is 0?
What is the correct definition? |
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You're correct. The Fibonacci sequence is defined with seed values The only condition under which |
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Based on the definition of the Fibonacci sequence, you can generate a closed form for defining the nth element:
For n = 0 it is clearly 0:
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From the Fibonacci number entry on Wikipedia:
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The definition with Fib(0) = 1 is known as the combinatorial definition, and Fib(0) = 0 is the classical definition. Both are used in the Fibonacci Quarterly, though authors that use the combinatorial definition need to add a sentence of explanation. Benjamin and Quinn in Proofs that Really Count use f_n for the nth combinatorial Fibonacci number and F_n for the nth classical Fibonacci number. The combinatorial definition is good, not surprisingly for counting questions like "How many ways are there to walk up a flight of n steps, taking either one or two steps at a time?" When n is 0, there's one way to do it, not zero ways. |
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That is the seed value definition. |
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They are both correct. If you specify a sequence G{n} by the recursion G{1} = 3, G{2} = 5, G{n} = G{ n - 1} + G{ n - 2} then most people would agree that is "a Fibonacci sequence". The only difference being a few terms at the front, but the leading terms are mostly irrelevant for any interesting questions about the sequence. The heart of a Fibonacci sequence is the addition rule, and any sequence that uses that rule is a Fibonacci sequence. It is only necessary to specify whether 0 is in the sequence if you want to ask specific questions about a particular index... every thing else is just a translation on the index and is pretty much irrelevant. That is, if the problem is 'find a closed form solution for the Nth value in the sequence', then solving it for G will solve the problem for F with just a trivial shift of the solution. The hard part of the problem is the same for both sequences. |
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