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Triangle Numbers (Posted on 2003-08-07) Difficulty: 3 of 5
Triangle numbers are :

1,3,6,10,15,21,28.

Somebody tells you a random positive integer of any size. Is there a quick way to work out if it is a triangle number or not (in other words, without going through all of the triangle numbers untill you get to a number as high or higher as the integer you've been told)?

See The Solution Submitted by Lewis    
Rating: 3.0000 (6 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
Solution Quadratic | Comment 7 of 9 |
Let us call a proposed triangular number x.

From the triangular number formula, we assume x is a triangular number:

x = (n^2 + n)/2

Multiply booth sides by 2:

2x = n^2 + n
0 = n^2 + n – 2x

This can be broken down into a quadratic equation with

a = 1 , b = 1 , c = -2x

By using the quadratic formula:

n = (-1±(1+8x)^0.5)/2

In order to prove that x is a triangular number, it must be substituted into the above equation with a positive integer resulting for n.
  Posted by Adam Sisco on 2003-08-11 02:40:29
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