Difficulty understanding what the (n-1) part refers to in a basic arithmetic sequence












1












$begingroup$


I am 28 and learned no maths in school. I'm going back through and learning on my own time. I am up to arithmetic sequences. The general formula (according to Khan Academy) for a recursive arithmetic sequence seems to be:



a(1)=3
a(n)=a(n−1)+2



I have a basic understanding of the concept of a sequence, i.e. that it is describing a relationship between numbers that involves either repeated addition or subtraction (it may involve multiplication and division as well but I'm not sure as I'm not up to that).



I cannot understand what the (n-1) is. I get that the a(1) is the first term and that the +2 at the end is what gets added to the term each time. But what is the n-1. I know it refers to something along the lines of finding the term before the term, I think?



Cheers for any explanations or examples.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Your age and background are unimportant.
    $endgroup$
    – John Douma
    Jan 16 at 0:31










  • $begingroup$
    Just like we use $x$ to refer to non-specific number when we don't know which one we use $a_n$ to refer to one of the terms in some position but we don't know which position. We call it the $n$th position. So $a_{n-1}$ is the term in the position immediately before it. And $a_{n+1}$ is the term in the position immediately after it.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Jan 16 at 0:54
















1












$begingroup$


I am 28 and learned no maths in school. I'm going back through and learning on my own time. I am up to arithmetic sequences. The general formula (according to Khan Academy) for a recursive arithmetic sequence seems to be:



a(1)=3
a(n)=a(n−1)+2



I have a basic understanding of the concept of a sequence, i.e. that it is describing a relationship between numbers that involves either repeated addition or subtraction (it may involve multiplication and division as well but I'm not sure as I'm not up to that).



I cannot understand what the (n-1) is. I get that the a(1) is the first term and that the +2 at the end is what gets added to the term each time. But what is the n-1. I know it refers to something along the lines of finding the term before the term, I think?



Cheers for any explanations or examples.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Your age and background are unimportant.
    $endgroup$
    – John Douma
    Jan 16 at 0:31










  • $begingroup$
    Just like we use $x$ to refer to non-specific number when we don't know which one we use $a_n$ to refer to one of the terms in some position but we don't know which position. We call it the $n$th position. So $a_{n-1}$ is the term in the position immediately before it. And $a_{n+1}$ is the term in the position immediately after it.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Jan 16 at 0:54














1












1








1





$begingroup$


I am 28 and learned no maths in school. I'm going back through and learning on my own time. I am up to arithmetic sequences. The general formula (according to Khan Academy) for a recursive arithmetic sequence seems to be:



a(1)=3
a(n)=a(n−1)+2



I have a basic understanding of the concept of a sequence, i.e. that it is describing a relationship between numbers that involves either repeated addition or subtraction (it may involve multiplication and division as well but I'm not sure as I'm not up to that).



I cannot understand what the (n-1) is. I get that the a(1) is the first term and that the +2 at the end is what gets added to the term each time. But what is the n-1. I know it refers to something along the lines of finding the term before the term, I think?



Cheers for any explanations or examples.










share|cite|improve this question









$endgroup$




I am 28 and learned no maths in school. I'm going back through and learning on my own time. I am up to arithmetic sequences. The general formula (according to Khan Academy) for a recursive arithmetic sequence seems to be:



a(1)=3
a(n)=a(n−1)+2



I have a basic understanding of the concept of a sequence, i.e. that it is describing a relationship between numbers that involves either repeated addition or subtraction (it may involve multiplication and division as well but I'm not sure as I'm not up to that).



I cannot understand what the (n-1) is. I get that the a(1) is the first term and that the +2 at the end is what gets added to the term each time. But what is the n-1. I know it refers to something along the lines of finding the term before the term, I think?



Cheers for any explanations or examples.







sequences-and-series






share|cite|improve this question













share|cite|improve this question











share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question










asked Jan 15 at 23:44









lachylachy

111




111












  • $begingroup$
    Your age and background are unimportant.
    $endgroup$
    – John Douma
    Jan 16 at 0:31










  • $begingroup$
    Just like we use $x$ to refer to non-specific number when we don't know which one we use $a_n$ to refer to one of the terms in some position but we don't know which position. We call it the $n$th position. So $a_{n-1}$ is the term in the position immediately before it. And $a_{n+1}$ is the term in the position immediately after it.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Jan 16 at 0:54


















  • $begingroup$
    Your age and background are unimportant.
    $endgroup$
    – John Douma
    Jan 16 at 0:31










  • $begingroup$
    Just like we use $x$ to refer to non-specific number when we don't know which one we use $a_n$ to refer to one of the terms in some position but we don't know which position. We call it the $n$th position. So $a_{n-1}$ is the term in the position immediately before it. And $a_{n+1}$ is the term in the position immediately after it.
    $endgroup$
    – fleablood
    Jan 16 at 0:54
















$begingroup$
Your age and background are unimportant.
$endgroup$
– John Douma
Jan 16 at 0:31




$begingroup$
Your age and background are unimportant.
$endgroup$
– John Douma
Jan 16 at 0:31












$begingroup$
Just like we use $x$ to refer to non-specific number when we don't know which one we use $a_n$ to refer to one of the terms in some position but we don't know which position. We call it the $n$th position. So $a_{n-1}$ is the term in the position immediately before it. And $a_{n+1}$ is the term in the position immediately after it.
$endgroup$
– fleablood
Jan 16 at 0:54




$begingroup$
Just like we use $x$ to refer to non-specific number when we don't know which one we use $a_n$ to refer to one of the terms in some position but we don't know which position. We call it the $n$th position. So $a_{n-1}$ is the term in the position immediately before it. And $a_{n+1}$ is the term in the position immediately after it.
$endgroup$
– fleablood
Jan 16 at 0:54










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0












$begingroup$

Recursive functions define values in terms of previous values.



In your case, the definition of $a$ says that the first value is $3$ and we get the $n$th value by adding $2$ to the previous value.



So



$a(2)=a(1)+2=3+2=5$,



$a(3)=a(2)+2=5+2=7$, etc.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$





















    0












    $begingroup$

    Your sequence will be a bunch of terms: $a_1, a_2, a_3, a_4,...... $ and we can refer to each term by its index. The fifth term is $a_5$. The $39$th term is $a_{39}$ and so on.



    If we pick some arbitrary term but want to indicate it might be any term we can call it be an arbitrary index. $a_n$ is the $n$-th term. It could be the $512$th term, $a_{512}$ or it could by the $7,487$th term, $a_{7,487}$. We don't know and don't care. We are refering to a non-specific term.



    We are refering to a term when we don't know what position it is in. We say "let's call the position it is in: $n$".



    Now, let's suppose I said "After picking that term look at the previous term" or "look at the next term". How can we refer to that. We if our term was the $a_{512}$ then the previous term would be .... $a_{511}$. And if our term was $a_{7,487}$ the next term would be .... $a_{7,488}$.



    But how do we refer to it in general. If our term was $a_n$ what is the term immediately before it. Well, if this was the $n$th term, the one write before it is the $n-1$th term, $a_{n-1}$.



    So in this case:




    $a_n = a_{n-1} + 2$




    means. "Pick any term. It is equal to the term before it plus two".



    So if the previous term $a_{n-1}$ was equal to $517$ then this term, $a_n$ will be equal to $519$.



    So $a_1 = 3$ because we were told so.



    And $a_2 = $ the previous term plus $2 = 3+2 = 5$.



    And $a_3 = a_2 + 2 = 5 + 2 = 7$ and so on...



    $a_4 = a_3 + 2 = 7 + 2= 9$ .....






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













    • $begingroup$
      Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
      $endgroup$
      – lachy
      Jan 17 at 0:26












    Your Answer








    StackExchange.ready(function() {
    var channelOptions = {
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "69"
    };
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
    createEditor();
    });
    }
    else {
    createEditor();
    }
    });

    function createEditor() {
    StackExchange.prepareEditor({
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
    convertImagesToLinks: true,
    noModals: true,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: 10,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    imageUploader: {
    brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
    contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
    allowUrls: true
    },
    noCode: true, onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    });


    }
    });














    draft saved

    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function () {
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3075130%2fdifficulty-understanding-what-the-n-1-part-refers-to-in-a-basic-arithmetic-seq%23new-answer', 'question_page');
    }
    );

    Post as a guest















    Required, but never shown

























    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0












    $begingroup$

    Recursive functions define values in terms of previous values.



    In your case, the definition of $a$ says that the first value is $3$ and we get the $n$th value by adding $2$ to the previous value.



    So



    $a(2)=a(1)+2=3+2=5$,



    $a(3)=a(2)+2=5+2=7$, etc.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$


















      0












      $begingroup$

      Recursive functions define values in terms of previous values.



      In your case, the definition of $a$ says that the first value is $3$ and we get the $n$th value by adding $2$ to the previous value.



      So



      $a(2)=a(1)+2=3+2=5$,



      $a(3)=a(2)+2=5+2=7$, etc.






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$
















        0












        0








        0





        $begingroup$

        Recursive functions define values in terms of previous values.



        In your case, the definition of $a$ says that the first value is $3$ and we get the $n$th value by adding $2$ to the previous value.



        So



        $a(2)=a(1)+2=3+2=5$,



        $a(3)=a(2)+2=5+2=7$, etc.






        share|cite|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        Recursive functions define values in terms of previous values.



        In your case, the definition of $a$ says that the first value is $3$ and we get the $n$th value by adding $2$ to the previous value.



        So



        $a(2)=a(1)+2=3+2=5$,



        $a(3)=a(2)+2=5+2=7$, etc.







        share|cite|improve this answer












        share|cite|improve this answer



        share|cite|improve this answer










        answered Jan 16 at 0:25









        John DoumaJohn Douma

        5,82021520




        5,82021520























            0












            $begingroup$

            Your sequence will be a bunch of terms: $a_1, a_2, a_3, a_4,...... $ and we can refer to each term by its index. The fifth term is $a_5$. The $39$th term is $a_{39}$ and so on.



            If we pick some arbitrary term but want to indicate it might be any term we can call it be an arbitrary index. $a_n$ is the $n$-th term. It could be the $512$th term, $a_{512}$ or it could by the $7,487$th term, $a_{7,487}$. We don't know and don't care. We are refering to a non-specific term.



            We are refering to a term when we don't know what position it is in. We say "let's call the position it is in: $n$".



            Now, let's suppose I said "After picking that term look at the previous term" or "look at the next term". How can we refer to that. We if our term was the $a_{512}$ then the previous term would be .... $a_{511}$. And if our term was $a_{7,487}$ the next term would be .... $a_{7,488}$.



            But how do we refer to it in general. If our term was $a_n$ what is the term immediately before it. Well, if this was the $n$th term, the one write before it is the $n-1$th term, $a_{n-1}$.



            So in this case:




            $a_n = a_{n-1} + 2$




            means. "Pick any term. It is equal to the term before it plus two".



            So if the previous term $a_{n-1}$ was equal to $517$ then this term, $a_n$ will be equal to $519$.



            So $a_1 = 3$ because we were told so.



            And $a_2 = $ the previous term plus $2 = 3+2 = 5$.



            And $a_3 = a_2 + 2 = 5 + 2 = 7$ and so on...



            $a_4 = a_3 + 2 = 7 + 2= 9$ .....






            share|cite|improve this answer









            $endgroup$













            • $begingroup$
              Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
              $endgroup$
              – lachy
              Jan 17 at 0:26
















            0












            $begingroup$

            Your sequence will be a bunch of terms: $a_1, a_2, a_3, a_4,...... $ and we can refer to each term by its index. The fifth term is $a_5$. The $39$th term is $a_{39}$ and so on.



            If we pick some arbitrary term but want to indicate it might be any term we can call it be an arbitrary index. $a_n$ is the $n$-th term. It could be the $512$th term, $a_{512}$ or it could by the $7,487$th term, $a_{7,487}$. We don't know and don't care. We are refering to a non-specific term.



            We are refering to a term when we don't know what position it is in. We say "let's call the position it is in: $n$".



            Now, let's suppose I said "After picking that term look at the previous term" or "look at the next term". How can we refer to that. We if our term was the $a_{512}$ then the previous term would be .... $a_{511}$. And if our term was $a_{7,487}$ the next term would be .... $a_{7,488}$.



            But how do we refer to it in general. If our term was $a_n$ what is the term immediately before it. Well, if this was the $n$th term, the one write before it is the $n-1$th term, $a_{n-1}$.



            So in this case:




            $a_n = a_{n-1} + 2$




            means. "Pick any term. It is equal to the term before it plus two".



            So if the previous term $a_{n-1}$ was equal to $517$ then this term, $a_n$ will be equal to $519$.



            So $a_1 = 3$ because we were told so.



            And $a_2 = $ the previous term plus $2 = 3+2 = 5$.



            And $a_3 = a_2 + 2 = 5 + 2 = 7$ and so on...



            $a_4 = a_3 + 2 = 7 + 2= 9$ .....






            share|cite|improve this answer









            $endgroup$













            • $begingroup$
              Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
              $endgroup$
              – lachy
              Jan 17 at 0:26














            0












            0








            0





            $begingroup$

            Your sequence will be a bunch of terms: $a_1, a_2, a_3, a_4,...... $ and we can refer to each term by its index. The fifth term is $a_5$. The $39$th term is $a_{39}$ and so on.



            If we pick some arbitrary term but want to indicate it might be any term we can call it be an arbitrary index. $a_n$ is the $n$-th term. It could be the $512$th term, $a_{512}$ or it could by the $7,487$th term, $a_{7,487}$. We don't know and don't care. We are refering to a non-specific term.



            We are refering to a term when we don't know what position it is in. We say "let's call the position it is in: $n$".



            Now, let's suppose I said "After picking that term look at the previous term" or "look at the next term". How can we refer to that. We if our term was the $a_{512}$ then the previous term would be .... $a_{511}$. And if our term was $a_{7,487}$ the next term would be .... $a_{7,488}$.



            But how do we refer to it in general. If our term was $a_n$ what is the term immediately before it. Well, if this was the $n$th term, the one write before it is the $n-1$th term, $a_{n-1}$.



            So in this case:




            $a_n = a_{n-1} + 2$




            means. "Pick any term. It is equal to the term before it plus two".



            So if the previous term $a_{n-1}$ was equal to $517$ then this term, $a_n$ will be equal to $519$.



            So $a_1 = 3$ because we were told so.



            And $a_2 = $ the previous term plus $2 = 3+2 = 5$.



            And $a_3 = a_2 + 2 = 5 + 2 = 7$ and so on...



            $a_4 = a_3 + 2 = 7 + 2= 9$ .....






            share|cite|improve this answer









            $endgroup$



            Your sequence will be a bunch of terms: $a_1, a_2, a_3, a_4,...... $ and we can refer to each term by its index. The fifth term is $a_5$. The $39$th term is $a_{39}$ and so on.



            If we pick some arbitrary term but want to indicate it might be any term we can call it be an arbitrary index. $a_n$ is the $n$-th term. It could be the $512$th term, $a_{512}$ or it could by the $7,487$th term, $a_{7,487}$. We don't know and don't care. We are refering to a non-specific term.



            We are refering to a term when we don't know what position it is in. We say "let's call the position it is in: $n$".



            Now, let's suppose I said "After picking that term look at the previous term" or "look at the next term". How can we refer to that. We if our term was the $a_{512}$ then the previous term would be .... $a_{511}$. And if our term was $a_{7,487}$ the next term would be .... $a_{7,488}$.



            But how do we refer to it in general. If our term was $a_n$ what is the term immediately before it. Well, if this was the $n$th term, the one write before it is the $n-1$th term, $a_{n-1}$.



            So in this case:




            $a_n = a_{n-1} + 2$




            means. "Pick any term. It is equal to the term before it plus two".



            So if the previous term $a_{n-1}$ was equal to $517$ then this term, $a_n$ will be equal to $519$.



            So $a_1 = 3$ because we were told so.



            And $a_2 = $ the previous term plus $2 = 3+2 = 5$.



            And $a_3 = a_2 + 2 = 5 + 2 = 7$ and so on...



            $a_4 = a_3 + 2 = 7 + 2= 9$ .....







            share|cite|improve this answer












            share|cite|improve this answer



            share|cite|improve this answer










            answered Jan 16 at 0:51









            fleabloodfleablood

            1




            1












            • $begingroup$
              Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
              $endgroup$
              – lachy
              Jan 17 at 0:26


















            • $begingroup$
              Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
              $endgroup$
              – lachy
              Jan 17 at 0:26
















            $begingroup$
            Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
            $endgroup$
            – lachy
            Jan 17 at 0:26




            $begingroup$
            Thanks very much for these helpful responses. This gives me a far better understanding of where the n-1 is coming from. I appreciate the time you all took to post. Cheers
            $endgroup$
            – lachy
            Jan 17 at 0:26


















            draft saved

            draft discarded




















































            Thanks for contributing an answer to Mathematics Stack Exchange!


            • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

            But avoid



            • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

            • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


            Use MathJax to format equations. MathJax reference.


            To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function () {
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmath.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f3075130%2fdifficulty-understanding-what-the-n-1-part-refers-to-in-a-basic-arithmetic-seq%23new-answer', 'question_page');
            }
            );

            Post as a guest















            Required, but never shown





















































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown

































            Required, but never shown














            Required, but never shown












            Required, but never shown







            Required, but never shown







            Popular posts from this blog

            Bressuire

            Cabo Verde

            Gyllenstierna