Mathematica Defining a counting function in mathematica

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on defining a counting function in Mathematica to determine the number of positive zeros of the function f_n(x) = sin(x/n) for natural numbers n, within a specified range (0, Z). The user seeks a general method to compute the cardinality of zeros less than a given Z, with examples indicating expected results for specific values of Z. Suggestions include using the FindInstance function in Mathematica, which allows for specifying the maximum number of instances to return. The user also inquires about the potential use of MATLAB for this task. Overall, the conversation emphasizes finding an effective computational approach to count zeros of the defined function.
michael71828
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Hi and thank you for reading this.

I'm learning to use mathematica and among those things I'm trying to do, is to define a function that can count for me, say, the number of positive zeros less than a given number Z of a familly of function.

For exemple, let f_n(x) = sin(x/n) for any natural number n. I want mathematica (or any other program you may suggest) to compute the cardinality of {x \in ]0,Z[ = (0,Z) : \exists n \in N for which f_n(x)=0}. For Z = \pi + 1, I would expect that cardinality to be 1, in that case. For Z=2\pi +1, it'd be 2, and so on.

I want a general method, so I can apply it to my specific problem.

Just let you know that I've google'd it, I looked wolfram's forums, wolfram documentation, asked friends, and couldn't find it !

I hope I was clear, and that my english wasn't too bad.

Thank you !
 
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Maybe the 2\pi +1 and so on wasn't so clear.

I really meant ''x over n'' in sin(x/n), but I used LaTeX terminology for ''pi'' 2\pi is really 2*pi.

I don't think I fooled many of you, but just in case... :)
 
Or maybe MATLAB would be better ?
 
Hi michael71828, welcome to PF,

For future reference you can display LaTeX using tex tags. Also, you will get faster answers if you don't respond to your own OP since some people look for unanswered posts and respond to those first.

I would recommend the FindInstance function for your purpose. Look at the documentation and see if you have any questions on how to use it. Be sure to use the option which allows you to specify the maximum number of instances to return.
 

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