Pigeonhole Principle/Combinatorics

thecat

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Let x be a real number and let n be a positive integer. Show that between the numbers x, 2x, 3x, ..., (n-1)x there is a distance to some integer is at most 1/n.

The only part I'm confused about is that if the fractional part of the number is between (n-1)/n and 1 then the statement is true. Somebody help me, please. Thank you in advance
 
I'm not sure of the wording of the problem. Is that exactly what you were given? The grammar of "there is a distance to some integer is at most 1/n" escapes me.

It sounds like you are saying you have proved most of it, but your proof doesn't work when the fractional part of x is greater than (n-1)/n. Is that what you are saying? Please show the proof as you have it so far, so we can see what is lacking.
 
This seems equivalent to:
For positive n consider a segment of length (n-2)/n. Prove that no matter how it's placed in [0,1], one of its ends is within 1/n from 0 or 1.
 
This seems equivalent to:
For positive n consider a segment of length (n-2)/n. Prove that no matter how it's placed in [0,1], one of its ends is within 1/n from 0 or 1.
That may well be the meaning. However, it certainly not what was posted. As Prof. Peterson wrote, The grammar of "there is a distance to some integer is at most 1/n" escapes me.
 
That may well be the meaning. However, it certainly not what was posted. As Prof. Peterson wrote, The grammar of "there is a distance to some integer is at most 1/n" escapes me.
I think it should be "there is a distance to some integer that is at most 1/n"
 
I'm not sure of the wording of the problem. Is that exactly what you were given? The grammar of "there is a distance to some integer is at most 1/n" escapes me.

It sounds like you are saying you have proved most of it, but your proof doesn't work when the fractional part of x is greater than (n-1)/n. Is that what you are saying? Please show the proof as you have it so far, so we can see what is lacking.
"Let x be any real number. Can it be proven that among the numbers x,2x,…,(n−1)x, there is one element that differs from an integer by at most 1/n?" This is the exact question.

By Pigeonhole, being n boxes,
we put in box 1 all the real \(\displaystyle "y"\) such that \(\displaystyle a≤y <a +\frac{1}{n}\), for an integer \(\displaystyle "a"\). in box 2, we put all the real "y" such that \(\displaystyle a + \frac{1}{n} ≤y <a + \frac{2}{n}\) for some integer "a", ..., and so on, until the n-th box.

My difficulty is proving that if any number is in the n-th box, the statement already exists, because for me the simultaneous inequality \(\displaystyle a +\frac{n-1}{n} ≤ y <a + \frac {n}{ n}\), produces\(\displaystyle | y-a | >\frac {1}{n}\). I can't understand the algebra involved for the n-th box.
 
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"Let x be any real number. Can it be proven that among the numbers x,2x,…,(n−1)x, there is one element that differs from an integer by at most 1/n?" This is the exact question.

By Pigeonhole, being n boxes,
we put in box 1 all the real \(\displaystyle "y"\) such that \(\displaystyle a≤y <a +\frac{1}{n}\), for an integer \(\displaystyle "a"\). in box 2, we put all the real "y" such that \(\displaystyle a + \frac{1}{n} ≤y <a + \frac{2}{n}\) for some integer "a", ..., and so on, until the n-th box.

My difficulty is proving that if any number is in the n-th box, the statement already exists, because for me the simultaneous inequality \(\displaystyle a +\frac{n-1}{n} ≤ y <a + \frac {n}{ n}\), produces\(\displaystyle | y-a | >\frac {1}{n}\). I can't understand the algebra involved for the n-th box.
You do realize that \(\displaystyle a +\frac{n-1}{n} = a + 1 -\frac{1}{n}≤ y <a + \frac {n}{ n}\) so \(\displaystyle 1 -\frac{1}{n}≤ y-a <1\)?
So of course y-a is within 1/n from the integer 1.
Can you please define a, y? Where is x, 2x, 3x,...?
 
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You do realize that \(\displaystyle a +\frac{n-1}{n} = a + 1 -\frac{1}{n}≤ y <a + \frac {n}{ n}\) so \(\displaystyle 1 -\frac{1}{n}≤ y-a <1\)?
So of course y-a is within 1/n from the integer 1.
Can you please define a, y? Where is x, 2x, 3x,...?






"y" is a generic real which will later be replaced by \(\displaystyle x, 2x, ..., (n-1)x\) and "a" is the integer that will be used to calculate the difference. For example, for box 1, we put all the reals "y" such that \(\displaystyle a≤ y <a +\frac{1}{n} \), then \(\displaystyle 0≤y-a<\frac{1}{n}\), and the statement is verified. I wanted to prove it to box "n" too. If the numbers are not in either, we will have \(\displaystyle n-1\) numbers for \(\displaystyle n-2\) boxes, so two of them would be in one, and that is simpler using PHP. My only question is to prove the validity for the n-th box, specifically, why \(\displaystyle a + \frac{n-1}{n} ≤ y <a + \frac{n}{n} \)implies that \(\displaystyle |y-a| <\frac{1}{n}\). It may be simple, but my lack of experience is limiting something.
 
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