Difference between revisions of "Lucas number"
(→lookup: grammar) |
(→based on Fibonacci sequence: review implementation) |
||
Line 59: | Line 59: | ||
\param n the index of the Lucas number to calculate | \param n the index of the Lucas number to calculate | ||
− | \return the Lucas number at n | + | \return the Lucas number at n, |
+ | unless n is out of range, then 0 | ||
} | } | ||
function lucas(const n: lucasLeftInverseRange): nativeUInt; | function lucas(const n: lucasLeftInverseRange): nativeUInt; | ||
begin | begin | ||
− | + | case n of | |
− | + | 1..high(n): | |
− | + | begin | |
− | + | lucas := fibonacci(n - 1) + fibonacci(n + 1); | |
− | + | end; | |
− | + | 0: | |
− | + | begin | |
− | lucas := | + | // We can not deduce L(0) from Fibonacci |
+ | // since that function is not defined for negative n | ||
+ | // [we would call fibonacci(-1) + fibonacci(1)]. | ||
+ | lucas := 2; | ||
+ | end; | ||
+ | otherwise | ||
+ | begin | ||
+ | // neutral element of addition | ||
+ | // indicating n is out of range | ||
+ | lucas := 0; | ||
+ | end; | ||
end; | end; | ||
end; | end; |
Revision as of 19:31, 10 November 2018
│
English (en) │
suomi (fi) │
français (fr) │
The Lucas series is the sequence of numbers:
2, 1, 3, 4, 7, 11, 18, 29, 47, …
The idea is, that the next number is produced by summing the two preceding ones.
generation
The following implementations intend to merely show the principle. They lack of input checking, thus have undefined behavior when supplied with parameters out of range.
recursive implementation
3type
4 /// domain for Lucas number function
5 /// where result fits within a nativeUInt
6 // You can not name it lucasDomain,
7 // since the Lucas number function itself
8 // is defined for all whole numbers
9 // but the result beyond L(n) exceeds high(nativeUInt).
10 lucasLeftInverseRange =
11 {$ifdef CPU64} 0..92 {$else} 0..46 {$endif};
12
13{**
14 calculates Lucas number recursively
15
16 \param n the index of the Lucas number to calculate
17 \return the Lucas number at n
18}
19function lucas(const n: lucasLeftInverseRange): nativeUInt;
20begin
21 case n of
22 2..high(n):
23 begin
24 lucas := lucas(n - 2) + lucas(n - 1);
25 end;
26 1:
27 begin
28 lucas := 1;
29 end;
30 0:
31 begin
32 lucas := 2;
33 end;
34 otherwise
35 begin
36 lucas := 0;
37 end;
38 end;
39end;
based on Fibonacci sequence
The Lucas numbers can be calculated by using the fibonacci
function shown in the article Fibonacci number.
54{**
55 calculates Lucas number based on Fibonacci numbers
56
57 \param n the index of the Lucas number to calculate
58 \return the Lucas number at n,
59 unless n is out of range, then 0
60}
61function lucas(const n: lucasLeftInverseRange): nativeUInt;
62begin
63 case n of
64 1..high(n):
65 begin
66 lucas := fibonacci(n - 1) + fibonacci(n + 1);
67 end;
68 0:
69 begin
70 // We can not deduce L(0) from Fibonacci
71 // since that function is not defined for negative n
72 // [we would call fibonacci(-1) + fibonacci(1)].
73 lucas := 2;
74 end;
75 otherwise
76 begin
77 // neutral element of addition
78 // indicating n is out of range
79 lucas := 0;
80 end;
81 end;
82end;
iterative implementation
This is in line with the iterative implementation of fibonacci
but with differing start values.
Therefore the code is not repeated here.
lookup
Calculating Lucas numbers every time they are needed is time-consuming.
While the code required for generation takes almost no space, a lookup table is the means of choice when an application needs them a lot.
Since Lucas numbers can be derived from Fibonacci numbers, usually only one table (those with the Fibonacci series) is stored, being a compromise between efficiency and memory utilization.
In order to use the fibonacci
table without margin case treatment, it has to be at least expanded to fibonacci[-1]
.
An actual implementation is omitted here, since everyone wants it differently. Also, do not program, what's already been programmed. For instance, the Lucas number functions of the GNU multiple precision arithmetic library take this approach.