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Anonymous wrote:I think the fourth options is missing.
option 4
"I have no idea what you just said?"
Alvaro wrote:... prove that one of them divides another.
tomcant wrote:Alvaro wrote:... prove that one of them divides another.
Is that more than one or only one?
Togra wrote:This little problem seems doable at first sight. I have some ideas, no tight proof yet, so perhaps my early vote for 'easy' should be reconsidered to 'intermediate'.
Anyway, I'm curious Alvaro: does this have something to do with the Math-Contest idea? If so, we should be careful using the word 'prove' - it would definitely scare people away.
leas5040 wrote:This brings up another good point: Should we just have people provide examples or actually prove it (i.e. by induction or other methods).
That would be a nice contest format: "Find the counterexample of ... (some conjecture)".GeekDog wrote:Providing an example proves nothing, unfortunately, because it doesn't prove that there are no counter-examples.
You guessed right: ints in the range [1,2n], bounds included.GeekDog wrote:I don't know what a "natural number" is either, which isn't helping me with this problem! I'm guessing it's a positive integer...
Togra wrote:@problem / vote
My initial vote for 'easy' was far too optimistic- I now consider this little problem to be hard. Just spent nearly an hour trying stuff, it lead me to believe the proof must be about prime-density estimations... that's out of my league. Should the proof go that way, Alvaro? You did work it out, didn't you
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