arashbh
- 22
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Hey guys
so yesterday the teacher gave us this problem and the one who knew how to solve it would win 5ive bucks ! somebody did eventually
now, the guy being very odd didnt leak out any solution of his whatsoever ! i don't know the way of doing it so help me out id appreciate it
...
HOW many natural numbers are out there between( 1...through...1000000), that are in the form of n^2, n^3 and n^4( of course n[itex]\in[/itex]N) ?
12th grade discrete math
Edit thanks to the warning : well now I am thinking the max of all three terms is clear, then we have to just count them like:: n2 [itex]\rightarrow[/itex] ,1000 is the maximum so there are 1000 numbers available for that
now all those numbers couldn't be applied for n3 and n4 because they would come out exceeding 1000000 !
i need a proper way to count those numbers
so yesterday the teacher gave us this problem and the one who knew how to solve it would win 5ive bucks ! somebody did eventually
now, the guy being very odd didnt leak out any solution of his whatsoever ! i don't know the way of doing it so help me out id appreciate it
...
HOW many natural numbers are out there between( 1...through...1000000), that are in the form of n^2, n^3 and n^4( of course n[itex]\in[/itex]N) ?
12th grade discrete math
Edit thanks to the warning : well now I am thinking the max of all three terms is clear, then we have to just count them like:: n2 [itex]\rightarrow[/itex] ,1000 is the maximum so there are 1000 numbers available for that
now all those numbers couldn't be applied for n3 and n4 because they would come out exceeding 1000000 !
i need a proper way to count those numbers
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