Fibonacci sequence, slightly different.
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Bob Whiley
el 19 de Feb. de 2015
Editada: Bob Whiley
el 19 de Feb. de 2015
I am trying to write a code for the fibonacci sequence, but instead of adding the the term to its previous one, I want a number to start with (say 4, my code input called begin) and its first two outputs would be 4. It would loop n times (say 7 for this example). The output would look like [4 4 8 12 16 20 24]. How could I generalize this. So far I have
if begin ~=1 || begin ~= 0
seq(1)=begin;
seq(2)=begin;
k=3;
while k <= n
seq(k)=seq(begin-1)+begin;
k =k+1;
end
end
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James Tursa
el 19 de Feb. de 2015
Looks like your indexing into seq is not quite right. Try this:
seq(k)=seq(k-1)+begin;
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Titus Edelhofer
el 19 de Feb. de 2015
Hi,
I don't see what this has to do with Fibonacci though ;-). But you don't need the loop, just do something like
seq = begin * [1 1:(n-1)];
Titus
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Evan
el 19 de Feb. de 2015
Editada: Evan
el 19 de Feb. de 2015
It seems to be quite close. You just need to make one small change. You should reference the seq variable using the index, k, not the begin variable:
begin = 4;
n = 5;
if begin ~=1 && begin ~= 0
seq(1)=begin;
seq(2)=begin;
k=3;
while k <= n
seq(k)=seq(k-1)+seq(k-2);
k = k+1;
end
end
Note that your example output isn't a fibonnaci sequence. Is this really what you want? If so, you could just make that array with:
begin = 4;
n = 5;
seq = [begin begin:begin:begin * n];
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