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Published byGlenna Wibowo Modified over 6 years ago
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Section 2.1 Proof Techniques Introduce proof techniques: o Exhaustive Proof: to prove all possible cases, Only if it is about a finite collection o Direct Proof: to prove PQ is true, Assume P is true, and deduce Q (like what we have done in Chap1) o Contraposition: to prove P Q is true By proving Q P CS130 Young
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k[ P(k) true P(k+1) true] P(n) true,n
o Contradiction: to prove PQ is true, (indirect proof) Assume both the hypothesis and the negation of the conclusion are true, then try to deduce some contradiction from this assumption. o Counterexample: to disprove something o Induction: to prove that P(n) is true, n Use the principle of mathematical induction: P(1) is true k[ P(k) true P(k+1) true] P(n) true,n CS130 Young
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n n! 2n 1 2 4 3 6 8 · Proof by Exhaustion:
eg: “For any positive integer n less than or equal to 3, n! < 2n” n n! 2n 1 2 4 3 6 8 CS130 Young
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eg:. “If an integer between 5and 15 is divisible by 6, then it
eg: “If an integer between 5and 15 is divisible by 6, then it is also divisible by 3” (Note: If the above problem is about all integers, then we cannot use exhaustive proof) Number Divisible by 6 Divisible by 3 5 No 6 Yes: 6 = 1X6 Yes: 6 = 2X3 7 8 9 Yes 10 11 12 Yes: 12 = 2X6 Yes: 12 = 4X3 13 14 15 CS130 Young
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eg: “Every integer less than 10 is bigger than 5”
Proof by Counterexample: eg: “Every integer less than 10 is bigger than 5” To prove the statement is not true, find a counterexample, integer = 4 < 10, but not > 5. eg: disprove that “the sum of any three consecutive integers is even.” counterexample : 2+3+4=9 CS130 Young
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eg: “for all x [x is divisible by 6 x is divisible by 3]”
· Direct Proof: eg: “for all x [x is divisible by 6 x is divisible by 3]” X is divisible by 6 x = k*6, for some integer k (hypothesis) x = k*2*3 x = (k*2)*3 (k*2) is some integer x is divisible by 3 CS130 Young
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eg: “the product of two even integers is even”
Let x = 2m, y = 2n for some integer m, n (hypothesis) xy = (2m)(2n) = 2(2mn), which is even. eg: “the sum of two odd integers is even” Let x = 2m+1, y = 2n+1 for some integer m,n (hypothesis) x + y = 2m + 2n+ 2 = 2(m+n+1), where m+n+1 is an integer x+y is even. CS130 Young
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Prove: n even n2 even (P Q Q P)
· Contraposition: eg: “If the square of an integer is odd, then the integer must be odd.” “n2 odd n odd” Prove: n even n2 even (P Q Q P) Let n = 2m for some integer m (hypothesis) n2 = n * n = 2m*2m = 2(2m2) n2 is even. CS130 Young
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· eg: “xy is odd iff both x and y are odd.”
() by direct proof: Let x = 2m+1, y=2n+1 for some m, n integers xy = (2m+1)(2n+1) = 4mn + 2m + 2n +1 = 2(2mn+m+n) +1 since 2mn + m + n is an integer, xy is odd. () by contraposition: to prove that : x even or y even, then xy even case1 x even, y odd: Let x = 2m, y = 2n+1 xy = 2(2mn + m), which is even case2 x odd, y even: similar to case1. case3 x even, y even: Let x = 2m, y = 2n xy = 2(2mn), which is even CS130 Young
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· Proof by Contradiction: Since (P Q F) (P Q) is a tautology,
It is sufficient to prove P Q F, then P Q is true. eg: “If a number added to itself gives itself, then the number is 0.” i.e. “x + x = x, then x = 0”: Assume x + x = x and x 0 2x = x and x 0 2 = 1, which is a contradiction the assumption must be wrong CS130 Young
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4 + 4 – 3 = 0 or 5 = 0, which is a contradiction.
·eg: “if x2 + 2x – 3 = 0, then x 2” Let x2 + 2x – 3 = 0 and assume x = 2, – 3 = 0 or 5 = 0, which is a contradiction. ( by direct proof: if x2 + 2x – 3 = 0 (x + 3)(x –1)= 0 x = -3 or x = 1 x 2 ) (by contraposition: if x = 2 x2 + 2x – 3 = 5 0 ) CS130 Young
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