How to write ( 2 n &#x2212;<!-- − --> 1 ) ( 2 n &#x2212;<!-- − -->

rigliztetbf

rigliztetbf

Answered question

2022-06-20

How to write ( 2 n 1 ) ( 2 n 2 ) ( 2 n 3 ) ( 2 n 4 ) terms of n factorials.
I want to get the final equations in terms of n, for example n = 3, then the equation is:
( 2 n 1 ) ( 2 n 2 ) ( 2 n 3 ), then the equation is: ( 2 n 1 ) ( 2 n 2 ) ( 2 n 3 ) ( 2 n 4 ).

Answer & Explanation

Nia Molina

Nia Molina

Beginner2022-06-21Added 21 answers

Step 1
I think you are trying to write the expression
( n ) ( n + 1 ) . . . ( 2 n 1 ) in a simpler form. Notice that
( 2 n 1 ) ! = ( 1 ) ( 2 ) . . . ( 2 n 1 )
Step 2
while ( n 1 ) ! = ( 1 ) ( 2 ) . . . ( n 1 )
so ( 2 n 1 ) ! ( n 1 ) ! = ( n ) ( n + 1 ) . . . ( 2 n 1 ) ..
Summer Bradford

Summer Bradford

Beginner2022-06-22Added 11 answers

Explanation:
Let's adress some cases:
- n := 1 : n (One term, given by ( 2 n 1 ), reduces to 1 which was your n)
- n := 2 : n ( n + 1 ) (Two terms, ( 2 n 1 ) ( 2 n 2 ), reduces to 3 2 which is n ( n + 1 )
- n := 3 : n ( n + 1 ) ( n + 2 ) (Three terms, ( 2 n 1 ) ( 2 n 2 ) ( 2 n 3 ), reduces to 5 4 3, a pattern, so...
- n := n : n ( n + 1 ) ( n + 2 ) . . . ( 2 n 1 ), using this pattern in terms of n as desired.
Note that when n is also the number of multiplicative elements, the last element ( 2 n n ) is exactly n.

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