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7 somewhere (Posted on 2022-08-12) Difficulty: 4 of 5
Prove: If x is a positive real number, then somewhere in the infinite sequence {x, 2x, 3x, ...} there is a number containing the digit 7.

If x is a positive real number, then somewhere in the finite sequence {x, 2x, 3x, ..., nx} there is a number containing the digit 7. Find the minimum value of n.

Note: Some numbers can be written in two ways (1.8=1.7999999...) only consider the form without all the 9's.

Source: Slightly adapted from a post by Victor Wang on Facebook.

No Solution Yet Submitted by Jer    
Rating: 5.0000 (2 votes)

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re(2): Part I proof | Comment 3 of 16 |
(In reply to re: Part I proof by Jer)

Well, then, let me put it differently.  For any interval on the slide rule that you pick, I can easily name an integer that falls in that interval.  That seems very obvious.  For instance, the interval [log 7.32, log 7.33) includes 732, 7320, 7321, ... , 7329, 73200, 73201, etc.

That means that the set of integers hits every interval on the slide rule.

  Posted by Steve Herman on 2022-08-12 09:19:04
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