Search: BP893
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BP893 |
| As one quantity increases an equally obvious opposite quantity decreases vs. there is only one obvious quantity, which increases as the sequence progresses right. |
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COMMENTS
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Another way of phrasing the solution: "Neither direction would more naturally be called increase in quantity vs. rightward progression would be called an increase."
Most right examples shown are unboundedly increasing, since finite sequences showing a quantity increasing usually also suggest "distance to end of sequence" as a decreasing opposite quantity. Even so, there are some finite sequences with one direction more intuitively increase-like than the other. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP888 BP889 BP890 BP891 BP892 * BP894 BP895 BP896 BP897 BP898
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KEYWORD
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creativeexamples, structure, rules
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WORLD
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constant_change_seq_increase_right [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP352 |
| Increasing quantity has no lower (or upper) bound (and gives a representation of negative numbers) vs. increasing quantity has lower (and/or upper) bound. |
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