Delta-N ratio: Difference between revisions

Arseniiv (talk | contribs)
m changed \frac to \dfrac at the start of the article to make the fractions possibly more readable, the formula being basically a display-style there
Arseniiv (talk | contribs)
m Properties: yet another minor clarification
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* 4/1 = (12/9) (9/6) (6/3) = '''(4/3) (3/2) (2/1)''' ''— now we can’t get delta-3 because there are 3 factors.''
* 4/1 = (12/9) (9/6) (6/3) = '''(4/3) (3/2) (2/1)''' ''— now we can’t get delta-3 because there are 3 factors.''
* 4/1 = (16/13) (13/10) (10/7) (7/4).
* 4/1 = (16/13) (13/10) (10/7) (7/4).
Also, if you factorize like this into ''K'' factors, then each of them into ''L'' factors, you get the same as if you directly factored into ''K L'' factors.
Also, if you factorize like this into ''K'' factors, then each of them into ''L'' factors, you get the same as if you directly factored into ''K L'' factors (including their order).


:''The general formula for this factorization is <math>\prod\limits_{i = 1}^K \frac {K A + i N} {K A + (i - 1) N} = \frac {A + N} A</math>. Here you can see more clearly that actual delta of factors will be <math>N / \operatorname{gcd}(K, N)</math>.''
:''The general formula for this factorization is <math>\prod\limits_{i = 1}^K \frac {K A + i N} {K A + (i - 1) N} = \frac {A + N} A</math>. Here you can see more clearly that actual delta of factors will be <math>N / \operatorname{gcd}(K, N)</math>.''