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Thue-Morse sequence: let A_k denote the first 2^k terms; then A_0 = 0 and for k >= 0, A_{k+1} = A_k B_k, where B_k is obtained from A_k by interchanging 0's and 1's.
+10
569
0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1
OFFSET
0,1
COMMENTS
Named after Axel Thue, whose name is pronounced as if it were spelled "Tü" where the ü sound is roughly as in the German word üben. (It is incorrect to say "Too-ee" or "Too-eh".) - N. J. A. Sloane, Jun 12 2018
Also called the Thue-Morse infinite word, or the Morse-Hedlund sequence, or the parity sequence.
Fixed point of the morphism 0 --> 01, 1 --> 10, see example. - Joerg Arndt, Mar 12 2013
The sequence is cubefree (does not contain three consecutive identical blocks) [see Offner for a direct proof] and is overlap-free (does not contain XYXYX where X is 0 or 1 and Y is any string of 0's and 1's).
a(n) = "parity sequence" = parity of number of 1's in binary representation of n.
To construct the sequence: alternate blocks of 0's and 1's of successive lengths A003159(k) - A003159(k-1), k = 1, 2, 3, ... (A003159(0) = 0). Example: since the first seven differences of A003159 are 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, the sequence starts with 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0. - Emeric Deutsch, Jan 10 2003
Characteristic function of A000069 (odious numbers). - Ralf Stephan, Jun 20 2003
a(n) = S2(n) mod 2, where S2(n) = sum of digits of n, n in base-2 notation. There is a class of generalized Thue-Morse sequences: Let Sk(n) = sum of digits of n; n in base-k notation. Let F(t) be some arithmetic function. Then a(n)= F(Sk(n)) mod m is a generalized Thue-Morse sequence. The classical Thue-Morse sequence is the case k=2, m=2, F(t)= 1*t. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Feb 12 2008 (with correction from Daniel Hug, May 19 2017)
More generally, the partial sums of the generalized Thue-Morse sequences a(n) = F(Sk(n)) mod m are fractal, where Sk(n) is sum of digits of n, n in base k; F(t) is an arithmetic function; m integer. - Ctibor O. Zizka, Feb 25 2008
Starting with offset 1, = running sums mod 2 of the kneading sequence (A035263, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, ...); also parity of A005187: (1, 3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11, 15, 16, 18, 19, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 15 2008
Generalized Thue-Morse sequences mod n (n>1) = the array shown in A141803. As n -> infinity the sequences -> (1, 2, 3, ...). - Gary W. Adamson, Jul 10 2008
The Thue-Morse sequence for N = 3 = A053838, (sum of digits of n in base 3, mod 3): (0, 1, 2, 1, 2, 0, 2, 0, 1, 1, 2, ...) = A004128 mod 3. - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 24 2008
For all positive integers k, the subsequence a(0) to a(2^k-1) is identical to the subsequence a(2^k+2^(k-1)) to a(2^(k+1)+2^(k-1)-1). That is to say, the first half of A_k is identical to the second half of B_k, and the second half of A_k is identical to the first quarter of B_{k+1}, which consists of the k/2 terms immediately following B_k.
Proof: The subsequence a(2^k+2^(k-1)) to a(2^(k+1)-1), the second half of B_k, is by definition formed from the subsequence a(2^(k-1)) to a(2^k-1), the second half of A_k, by interchanging its 0's and 1's. In turn, the subsequence a(2^(k-1)) to a(2^k-1), the second half of A_k, which is by definition also B_{k-1}, is by definition formed from the subsequence a(0) to a(2^(k-1)-1), the first half of A_k, which is by definition also A_{k-1}, by interchanging its 0's and 1's. Interchanging the 0's and 1's of a subsequence twice leaves it unchanged, so the subsequence a(2^k+2^(k-1)) to a(2^(k+1)-1), the second half of B_k, must be identical to the subsequence a(0) to a(2^(k-1)-1), the first half of A_k.
Also, the subsequence a(2^(k+1)) to a(2^(k+1)+2^(k-1)-1), the first quarter of B_{k+1}, is by definition formed from the subsequence a(0) to a(2^(k-1)-1), the first quarter of A_{k+1}, by interchanging its 0's and 1's. As noted above, the subsequence a(2^(k-1)) to a(2^k-1), the second half of A_k, which is by definition also B_{k-1}, is by definition formed from the subsequence a(0) to a(2^(k-1)-1), which is by definition A_{k-1}, by interchanging its 0's and 1's, as well. If two subsequences are formed from the same subsequence by interchanging its 0's and 1's then they must be identical, so the subsequence a(2^(k+1)) to a(2^(k+1)+2^(k-1)-1), the first quarter of B_{k+1}, must be identical to the subsequence a(2^(k-1)) to a(2^k-1), the second half of A_k.
Therefore the subsequence a(0), ..., a(2^(k-1)-1), a(2^(k-1)), ..., a(2^k-1) is identical to the subsequence a(2^k+2^(k-1)), ..., a(2^(k+1)-1), a(2^(k+1)), ..., a(2^(k+1)+2^(k-1)-1), QED.
According to the German chess rules of 1929 a game of chess was drawn if the same sequence of moves was repeated three times consecutively. Euwe, see the references, proved that this rule could lead to infinite games. For his proof he reinvented the Thue-Morse sequence. - Johannes W. Meijer, Feb 04 2010
"Thue-Morse 0->01 & 1->10, at each stage append the previous with its complement. Start with 0, 1, 2, 3 and write them in binary. Next calculate the sum of the digits (mod 2) - that is divide the sum by 2 and use the remainder." Pickover, The Math Book.
Let s_2(n) be the sum of the base-2 digits of n and epsilon(n) = (-1)^s_2(n), the Thue-Morse sequence, then prod(n >= 0, ((2*n+1)/(2*n+2))^epsilon(n) ) = 1/sqrt(2). - Jonathan Vos Post, Jun 06 2012
Dekking shows that the constant obtained by interpreting this sequence as a binary expansion is transcendental; see also "The Ubiquitous Prouhet-Thue-Morse Sequence". - Charles R Greathouse IV, Jul 23 2013
Drmota, Mauduit, and Rivat proved that the subsequence a(n^2) is normal--see A228039. - Jonathan Sondow, Sep 03 2013
Although the probability of a 0 or 1 is equal, guesses predicated on the latest bit seen produce a correct match 2 out of 3 times. - Bill McEachen, Mar 13 2015
From a(0) to a(2n+1), there are n+1 terms equal to 0 and n+1 terms equal to 1 (see Hassan Tarfaoui link, Concours Général 1990). - Bernard Schott, Jan 21 2022
REFERENCES
J.-P. Allouche and J. Shallit, Automatic Sequences, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2003, p. 15.
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J. Berstel and J. Karhumaki, Combinatorics on words - a tutorial, Bull. EATCS, #79 (2003), pp. 178-228.
B. Bollobas, The Art of Mathematics: Coffee Time in Memphis, Cambridge, 2006, p. 224.
S. Brlek, Enumeration of factors in the Thue-Morse word, Discrete Applied Math., 24 (1989), 83-96. doi:10.1016/0166-218X(92)90274-E.
Yann Bugeaud and Guo-Niu Han, A combinatorial proof of the non-vanishing of Hankel determinants of the Thue-Morse sequence, Electronic Journal of Combinatorics 21(3) (2014), #P3.26.
Y. Bugeaud and M. Queffélec, On Rational Approximation of the Binary Thue-Morse-Mahler Number, Journal of Integer Sequences, 16 (2013), #13.2.3.
Currie, James D. "Non-repetitive words: Ages and essences." Combinatorica 16.1 (1996): 19-40
Colin Defant, Anti-Power Prefixes of the Thue-Morse Word, Journal of Combinatorics, 24(1) (2017), #P1.32
F. M. Dekking, Transcendance du nombre de Thue-Morse, Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences de Paris 285 (1977), pp. 157-160.
F. M. Dekking, On repetitions of blocks in binary sequences. J. Combinatorial Theory Ser. A 20 (1976), no. 3, pp. 292-299. MR0429728(55 #2739)
Dekking, Michel, Michel Mendès France, and Alf van der Poorten. "Folds." The Mathematical Intelligencer, 4.3 (1982): 130-138 & front cover, and 4:4 (1982): 173-181 (printed in two parts).
Dubickas, Artūras. On a sequence related to that of Thue-Morse and its applications. Discrete Math. 307 (2007), no. 9-10, 1082--1093. MR2292537 (2008b:11086).
Fabien Durand, Julien Leroy, and Gwenaël Richomme, "Do the Properties of an S-adic Representation Determine Factor Complexity?", Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 16 (2013), #13.2.6.
M. Euwe, Mengentheoretische Betrachtungen Über das Schachspiel, Proceedings Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen, Amsterdam, Vol. 32 (5): 633-642, 1929.
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S. R. Finch, Mathematical Constants, Cambridge, 2003, Section 6.8.
W. H. Gottschalk and G. A. Hedlund, Topological Dynamics. American Mathematical Society, Colloquium Publications, Vol. 36, Providence, RI, 1955, p. 105.
J. Grytczuk, Thue type problems for graphs, points and numbers, Discrete Math., 308 (2008), 4419-4429.
A. Hof, O. Knill and B. Simon, Singular continuous spectrum for palindromic Schroedinger operators, Commun. Math. Phys. 174 (1995), 149-159.
Mari Huova and Juhani Karhumäki, "On Unavoidability of k-abelian Squares in Pure Morphic Words", Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 16 (2013), #13.2.9.
B. Kitchens, Review of "Computational Ergodic Theory" by G. H. Choe, Bull. Amer. Math. Soc., 44 (2007), 147-155.
Le Breton, Xavier, Linear independence of automatic formal power series. Discrete Math. 306 (2006), no. 15, 1776-1780.
M. Lothaire, Combinatorics on Words. Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1983, p. 23.
Donald MacMurray, A mathematician gives an hour to chess, Chess Review 6 (No. 10, 1938), 238. [Discusses Marston's 1938 article]
Mauduit, Christian. Multiplicative properties of the Thue-Morse sequence. Period. Math. Hungar. 43 (2001), no. 1-2, 137--153. MR1830572 (2002i:11081)
C. A. Pickover, Wonders of Numbers, Adventures in Mathematics, Mind and Meaning, Chapter 17, 'The Pipes of Papua,' Oxford University Press, Oxford, England, 2000, pages 34-38.
C. A. Pickover, A Passion for Mathematics, Wiley, 2005; see p. 60.
Clifford A. Pickover, The Math Book, From Pythagoras to the 57th Dimension, 250 Milestones in the History of Mathematics, Sterling Publ., NY, 2009, page 316.
Narad Rampersad and Elise Vaslet, "On Highly Repetitive and Power Free Words", Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 16 (2013), #13.2.7.
G. Richomme, K. Saari, L. Q. Zamboni, Abelian complexity in minimal subshifts, J. London Math. Soc. 83(1) (2011) 79-95.
Michel Rigo, Formal Languages, Automata and Numeration Systems, 2 vols., Wiley, 2014. Mentions this sequence - see "List of Sequences" in Vol. 2.
M. Rigo, P. Salimov, and E. Vandomme, "Some Properties of Abelian Return Words", Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 16 (2013), #13.2.5.
Benoit Rittaud, Elise Janvresse, Emmanuel Lesigne and Jean-Christophe Novelli, Quand les maths se font discrètes, Le Pommier, 2008 (ISBN 978-2-7465-0370-0).
A. Salomaa, Jewels of Formal Language Theory. Computer Science Press, Rockville, MD, 1981, p. 6.
Shallit, J. O. "On Infinite Products Associated with Sums of Digits." J. Number Th. 21, 128-134, 1985.
Ian Stewart, "Feedback", Mathematical Recreations Column, Scientific American, 274 (No. 3, 1996), page 109 [Historical notes on this sequence]
Thomas Stoll, On digital blocks of polynomial values and extractions in the Rudin-Shapiro sequence, RAIRO - Theoretical Informatics and Applications (RAIRO: ITA), EDP Sciences, 2016, 50, pp. 93-99. <hal-01278708>.
A. Thue. Über unendliche Zeichenreihen, Norske Vid. Selsk. Skr. I. Mat. Nat. Kl. Christiania, No. 7 (1906), 1-22.
A. Thue, Über die gegenseitige Lage gleicher Teile gewisser Zeichenreihen, Norske Vid. Selsk. Skr. I. Mat. Nat. Kl. Christiania, 1 (1912), 1-67.
S. Wolfram, A New Kind of Science, Wolfram Media, 2002; p. 890.
LINKS
A. G. M. Ahmed, AA Weaving. In: Proceedings of Bridges 2013: Mathematics, Music, Art, ..., 2013.
A. Aksenov, The Newman phenomenon and Lucas sequence, arXiv preprint arXiv:1108.5352 [math.NT], 2011-2012.
Max A. Alekseyev and N. J. A. Sloane, On Kaprekar's Junction Numbers, arXiv:2112.14365, 2021; Journal of Combinatorics and Number Theory 12:3 (2022), 115-155.
J.-P. Allouche, Series and infinite products related to binary expansions of integers, Behaviour, 4.4 (1992): p. 5.
J.-P. Allouche, Lecture notes on automatic sequences, Krakow October 2013.
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J.-P. Allouche, Andre Arnold, Jean Berstel, Srecko Brlek, William Jockusch, Simon Plouffe and Bruce E. Sagan, A relative of the Thue-Morse sequence, Discrete Math., 139 (1995), 455-461.
Jean-Paul Allouche, Julien Cassaigne, Jeffrey Shallit and Luca Q. Zamboni, A Taxonomy of Morphic Sequences, arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.10807 [cs.FL], Nov 29 2017.
J.-P. Allouche and H. Cohen, Dirichlet Series and Curious Infinite Products, Bull. London Math. Soc. 17, 531-538, 1985.
J.-P. Allouche and M. Mendes France, Automata and Automatic Sequences, in: Axel F. and Gratias D. (eds), Beyond Quasicrystals. Centre de Physique des Houches, vol 3. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 293-367, 1995; DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-03130-8_11.
J.-P. Allouche and M. Mendes France, Automata and Automatic Sequences, in: Axel F. and Gratias D. (eds), Beyond Quasicrystals. Centre de Physique des Houches, vol 3. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 293-367, 1995; DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-03130-8_11. [Local copy]
J.-P. Allouche and Jeffrey Shallit, The Ubiquitous Prouhet-Thue-Morse Sequence, in C. Ding. T. Helleseth and H. Niederreiter, eds., Sequences and Their Applications: Proceedings of SETA '98, Springer-Verlag, 1999, pp. 1-16.
J.-P. Allouche and J. Shallit, The Ring of k-regular Sequences, II, Theoretical Computer Science 307.1 (2003): 3-29. doi:10.1016/S0304-3975(03)00090-2
Jorge Almeida and Ondrej Klíma, Binary patterns in the Prouhet-Thue-Morse sequence, arXiv:1904.07137 [math.CO], 2019.
G. N. Arzhantseva, C. H. Cashen, D. Gruber and D. Hume, Contracting geodesics in infinitely presented graphical small cancellation groups, arXiv preprint arXiv:1602.03767 [math.GR], 2016-2018.
Ricardo Astudillo, On a Class of Thue-Morse Type Sequences, J. Integer Seqs., Vol. 6, 2003.
F. Axel et al., Vibrational modes in a one dimensional "quasi-alloy": the Morse case, J. de Physique, Colloq. C3, Supp. to No. 7, Vol. 47 (Jul 1986), pp. C3-181-C3-186; see Eq. (10).
M. Baake, U. Grimm and J. Nilsson, Scaling of the Thue-Morse diffraction measure, arXiv preprint arXiv:1311.4371 [math-ph], 2013.
Scott Balchin and Dan Rust, Computations for Symbolic Substitutions, Journal of Integer Sequences, Vol. 20 (2017), Article 17.4.1.
Lucilla Baldini and Josef Eschgfäller, Random functions from coupled dynamical systems, arXiv preprint arXiv:1609.01750 [math.CO], 2016. See Example 3.11.
J. Berstel, Axel Thue's papers on repetitions in words: a translation, July 21 1994. Publications du LaCIM, Département de mathématiques et d'informatique 20, Université du Québec à Montréal, 1995, 85 pages. [Cached copy]
J.-F. Bertazzon, Resolution of an integral equation with the Thue-Morse sequence, arXiv:1201.2502v1 [math.CO], Jan 12, 2012.
J. Cooper and A. Dutle, Greedy Galois Games, Amer. Math. Mnthly, 120 (2013), 441-451.
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F. Michel Dekking, Morphisms, Symbolic sequences, and their Standard Forms, arXiv:1509.00260 [math.CO], 2015.
F. M. Dekking, The Thue-Morse Sequence in Base 3/2, J. Int. Seq., Vol. 26 (2023), Article 23.2.3.
A. de Luca and S. Varricchio, Some combinatorial properties of the Thue-Morse sequence and a problem in semigroups, Theoret. Comput. Sci. 63 (1989), 333-348.
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M. Drmota, C. Mauduit and J. Rivat, The Thue-Morse Sequence Along The Squares is Normal, Abstract, ÖMG-DMV Congress, 2013.
Arthur Dolgopolov, Equitable Sequencing and Allocation Under Uncertainty, Preprint, 2016.
J. Endrullis, D. Hendriks and J. W. Klop, Degrees of streams, Journal of Integers B 11 (2011): 1-40..
A. S. Fraenkel, New games related to old and new sequences, INTEGERS, Electronic J. of Combinatorial Number Theory, Vol. 4, Paper G6, 2004.
Hao Fu and G.-N. Han, Computer assisted proof for Apwenian sequences related to Hankel determinants, arXiv preprint arXiv:1601.04370 [math.NT], 2016.
Maciej Gawro and Maciej Ulas, "On formal inverse of the Prouhet-Thue-Morse sequence." Discrete Mathematics 339.5 (2016): 1459-1470. Also arXiv:1601.04840, 2016.
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Dimitri Hendriks, Frits G. W. Dannenberg, Jorg Endrullis, Mark Dow and Jan Willem Klop, Arithmetic Self-Similarity of Infinite Sequences, arXiv preprint 1201.3786 [math.CO], 2012.
A. M. Hinz, S. Klavžar, U. Milutinović and C. Petr, The Tower of Hanoi - Myths and Maths, Birkhäuser 2013. See page 79. Website for book
Tanya Khovanova, There are no coincidences, arXiv preprint 1410.2193 [math.CO], 2014.
Clark Kimberling, Intriguing infinite words composed of zeros and ones, Elemente der Mathematik (2021).
Naoki Kobayashi, Kazutaka Matsuda and Ayumi Shinohara, Functional Programs as Compressed Data, Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation, 25, no. 1 (2012): 39-84..
Philip Lafrance, Narad Rampersad and Randy Yee, Some properties of a Rudin-Shapiro-like sequence, arXiv:1408.2277 [math.CO], 2014.
C. Mauduit and J. Rivat, La somme des chiffres des carrés, Acta Mathem. 203 (1) (2009) 107-148.
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F. Mignosi, A. Restivo, and M. Sciortino, Words and forbidden factors, WORDS (Rouen, 1999). Theoret. Comput. Sci. 273 (2002), no. 1-2, 99--117. MR1872445 (2002m:68096).
Marston Morse, A solution of the problem of infinite play in chess, (review), Bull. Amer. Math. Soc., 44 (No. 9, 1938), p. 632. [Mentions an application to chess]
K. Nakano, Shall We Juggle, Coinductively?, in Certified Programs and Proofs, Lecture Notes in Computer Science Volume 7679, 2012, pp. 160-172.
Hieu D. Nguyen, A mixing of Prouhet-Thue-Morse sequences and Rademacher functions, arXiv preprint arXiv:1405.6958 [math.NT], 2014.
Hieu D. Nguyen, A Generalization of the Digital Binomial Theorem , J. Int. Seq. 18 (2015) # 15.5.7.
C. D. Offner, Repetitions of Words and the Thue-Morse sequence. Preprint, no date.
Matt Parker, The Fairest Sharing Sequence Ever, YouTube video, Nov 27 2015
A. Parreau, M. Rigo, E. Rowland and E. Vandomme, A new approach to the 2-regularity of the l-abelian complexity of 2-automatic sequences, arXiv preprint arXiv:1405.3532 [cs.FL], 2014.
C. A. Pickover, "Wonders of Numbers, Adventures in Mathematics, Mind and Meaning," Zentralblatt review
E. Prouhet, Mémoire sur quelques relations entre les puissances des nombres, Comptes Rendus Acad. des Sciences, 33 (No. 8, 1851), p. 225. [Said to implicitly mention this sequence]
Michel Rigo, Relations on words, arXiv preprint arXiv:1602.03364 [cs.FL], 2016.
Luke Schaeffer and Jeffrey Shallit, Closed, Palindromic, Rich, Privileged, Trapezoidal, and Balanced Words in Automatic Sequences, Electronic Journal of Combinatorics 23(1) (2016), #P1.25.
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Vladimir Shevelev, Two analogs of Thue-Morse sequence, arXiv preprint arXiv:1603.04434 [math.NT], 2016-2017.
L. Spiegelhofer, Normality of the Thue-Morse Sequence along Piatetski-Shapiro sequences, Quart. J. Math. 66 (3) (2015).
Hassan Tarfaoui, Concours Général 1990 - Exercice 1 (in French).
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Thue-Morse Sequence
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Thue-Morse Constant
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Parity
Joost Winter, Marcello M. Bonsangue, and Jan J. M. M. Rutten, Context-free coalgebras, Journal of Computer and System Sciences, 81.5 (2015): 911-939.
Hans Zantema, Complexity of Automatic Sequences, International Conference on Language and Automata Theory and Applications (LATA 2020): Language and Automata Theory and Applications, 260-271.
FORMULA
a(2n) = a(n), a(2n+1) = 1 - a(n), a(0) = 0. Also, a(k+2^m) = 1 - a(k) if 0 <= k < 2^m.
If n = Sum b_i*2^i is the binary expansion of n then a(n) = Sum b_i (mod 2).
Let S(0) = 0 and for k >= 1, construct S(k) from S(k-1) by mapping 0 -> 01 and 1 -> 10; sequence is S(infinity).
G.f.: (1/(1 - x) - Product_{k >= 0} (1 - x^(2^k)))/2. - Benoit Cloitre, Apr 23 2003
a(0) = 0, a(n) = (n + a(floor(n/2))) mod 2; also a(0) = 0, a(n) = (n - a(floor(n/2))) mod 2. - Benoit Cloitre, Dec 10 2003
a(n) = -1 + (Sum_{k=0..n} binomial(n,k) mod 2) mod 3 = -1 + A001316(n) mod 3. - Benoit Cloitre, May 09 2004
Let b(1) = 1 and b(n) = b(ceiling(n/2)) - b(floor(n/2)) then a(n-1) = (1/2)*(1 - b(2n-1)). - Benoit Cloitre, Apr 26 2005
a(n) = 1 - A010059(n) = A001285(n) - 1. - Ralf Stephan, Jun 20 2003
a(n) = A001969(n) - 2n. - Franklin T. Adams-Watters, Aug 28 2006
a(n) = A115384(n) - A115384(n-1) for n > 0. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Aug 26 2007
For n >= 0, a(A004760(n+1)) = 1 - a(n). - Vladimir Shevelev, Apr 25 2009
a(A160217(n)) = 1 - a(n). - Vladimir Shevelev, May 05 2009
a(n) == A000069(n) (mod 2). - Robert G. Wilson v, Jan 18 2012
a(n) = A000035(A000120(n)). - Omar E. Pol, Oct 26 2013
a(n) = A000035(A193231(n)). - Antti Karttunen, Dec 27 2013
a(n) + A181155(n-1) = 2n for n >= 1. - Clark Kimberling, Oct 06 2014
G.f. A(x) satisfies: A(x) = x / (1 - x^2) + (1 - x) * A(x^2). - Ilya Gutkovskiy, Jul 29 2021
From Bernard Schott, Jan 21 2022: (Start)
a(n) = a(n*2^k) for k >= 0.
a((2^m-1)^2) = (1-(-1)^m)/2 (see Hassan Tarfaoui link, Concours Général 1990). (End)
EXAMPLE
The evolution starting at 0 is:
0
0, 1
0, 1, 1, 0
0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1
0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0
0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1
.......
A_2 = 0 1 1 0, so B_2 = 1 0 0 1 and A_3 = A_2 B_2 = 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1.
From Joerg Arndt, Mar 12 2013: (Start)
The first steps of the iterated substitution are
Start: 0
Rules:
0 --> 01
1 --> 10
-------------
0: (#=1)
0
1: (#=2)
01
2: (#=4)
0110
3: (#=8)
01101001
4: (#=16)
0110100110010110
5: (#=32)
01101001100101101001011001101001
6: (#=64)
0110100110010110100101100110100110010110011010010110100110010110
(End)
From Omar E. Pol, Oct 28 2013: (Start)
Written as an irregular triangle in which row lengths is A011782, the sequence begins:
0;
1;
1,0;
1,0,0,1;
1,0,0,1,0,1,1,0;
1,0,0,1,0,1,1,0,0,1,1,0,1,0,0,1;
1,0,0,1,0,1,1,0,0,1,1,0,1,0,0,1,0,1,1,0,1,0,0,1,1,0,0,1,0,1,1,0;
It appears that: row j lists the first A011782(j) terms of A010059, with j >= 0; row sums give A166444 which is also 0 together with A011782; right border gives A000035.
(End)
MAPLE
s := proc(k) local i, ans; ans := [ 0, 1 ]; for i from 0 to k do ans := [ op(ans), op(map(n->(n+1) mod 2, ans)) ] od; return ans; end; t1 := s(6); A010060 := n->t1[n]; # s(k) gives first 2^(k+2) terms.
a := proc(k) b := [0]: for n from 1 to k do b := subs({0=[0, 1], 1=[1, 0]}, b) od: b; end; # a(k), after the removal of the brackets, gives the first 2^k terms. # Example: a(3); gives [[[[0, 1], [1, 0]], [[1, 0], [0, 1]]]]
A010060:=proc(n)
add(i, i=convert(n, base, 2)) mod 2 ;
end proc:
seq(A010060(n), n=0..104); # Emeric Deutsch, Mar 19 2005
map(`-`, convert(StringTools[ThueMorse](1000), bytes), 48); # Robert Israel, Sep 22 2014
MATHEMATICA
Table[ If[ OddQ[ Count[ IntegerDigits[n, 2], 1]], 1, 0], {n, 0, 100}];
mt = 0; Do[ mt = ToString[mt] <> ToString[(10^(2^n) - 1)/9 - ToExpression[mt] ], {n, 0, 6} ]; Prepend[ RealDigits[ N[ ToExpression[mt], 2^7] ] [ [1] ], 0]
Mod[ Count[ #, 1 ]& /@Table[ IntegerDigits[ i, 2 ], {i, 0, 2^7 - 1} ], 2 ] (* Harlan J. Brothers, Feb 05 2005 *)
Nest[ Flatten[ # /. {0 -> {0, 1}, 1 -> {1, 0}}] &, {0}, 7] (* Robert G. Wilson v Sep 26 2006 *)
a[n_] := If[n == 0, 0, If[Mod[n, 2] == 0, a[n/2], 1 - a[(n - 1)/2]]] (* Ben Branman, Oct 22 2010 *)
a[n_] := Mod[Length[FixedPointList[BitAnd[#, # - 1] &, n]], 2] (* Jan Mangaldan, Jul 23 2015 *)
Table[2/3 (1 - Cos[Pi/3 (n - Sum[(-1)^Binomial[n, k], {k, 1, n}])]), {n, 0, 100}] (* or, for version 10.2 or higher *) Table[ThueMorse[n], {n, 0, 100}] (* Vladimir Reshetnikov, May 06 2016 *)
ThueMorse[Range[0, 100]] (* The program uses the ThueMorse function from Mathematica version 11 *) (* Harvey P. Dale, Aug 11 2016 *)
Nest[Join[#, 1 - #] &, {0}, 7] (* Paolo Xausa, Oct 25 2024 *)
PROG
(Haskell)
a010060 n = a010060_list !! n
a010060_list =
0 : interleave (complement a010060_list) (tail a010060_list)
where complement = map (1 - )
interleave (x:xs) ys = x : interleave ys xs
-- Doug McIlroy (doug(AT)cs.dartmouth.edu), Jun 29 2003
-- Edited by Reinhard Zumkeller, Oct 03 2012
(PARI) a(n)=if(n<1, 0, sum(k=0, length(binary(n))-1, bittest(n, k))%2)
(PARI) a(n)=if(n<1, 0, subst(Pol(binary(n)), x, 1)%2)
(PARI) default(realprecision, 6100); x=0.0; m=20080; for (n=1, m-1, x=x+x; x=x+sum(k=0, length(binary(n))-1, bittest(n, k))%2); x=2*x/2^m; for (n=0, 20000, d=floor(x); x=(x-d)*2; write("b010060.txt", n, " ", d)); \\ Harry J. Smith, Apr 28 2009
(PARI) a(n)=hammingweight(n)%2 \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, Mar 22 2013
(Python)
A010060_list = [0]
for _ in range(14):
A010060_list += [1-d for d in A010060_list] # Chai Wah Wu, Mar 04 2016
(Python)
def A010060(n): return n.bit_count()&1 # Chai Wah Wu, Mar 01 2023
(R)
maxrow <- 8 # by choice
b01 <- 1
for(m in 0:maxrow) for(k in 0:(2^m-1)){
b01[2^(m+1)+ k] <- b01[2^m+k]
b01[2^(m+1)+2^m+k] <- 1-b01[2^m+k]
}
(b01 <- c(0, b01))
# Yosu Yurramendi, Apr 10 2017
CROSSREFS
Cf. A001285 (for 1, 2 version), A010059 (for 1, 0 version), A106400 (for +1, -1 version), A048707. A010060(n)=A000120(n) mod 2.
Cf. A007413, A080813, A080814, A036581, A108694. See also the Thue (or Roth) constant A014578, also A014571.
Run lengths give A026465. Backward first differences give A029883.
Cf. A004128, A053838, A059448, A171900, A161916, A214212, A005942 (subword complexity), A010693 (Abelian complexity), A225186 (squares), A228039 (a(n^2)), A282317.
Sequences mentioned in the Allouche et al. "Taxonomy" paper, listed by example number: 1: A003849, 2: A010060, 3: A010056, 4: A020985 and A020987, 5: A191818, 6: A316340 and A273129, 18: A316341, 19: A030302, 20: A063438, 21: A316342, 22: A316343, 23: A003849 minus its first term, 24: A316344, 25: A316345 and A316824, 26: A020985 and A020987, 27: A316825, 28: A159689, 29: A049320, 30: A003849, 31: A316826, 32: A316827, 33: A316828, 34: A316344, 35: A043529, 36: A316829, 37: A010060.
KEYWORD
nonn,core,easy,nice
STATUS
approved
Fibonacci numbers (or rabbit sequence) converted to decimal.
(Formerly M1539)
+10
17
0, 1, 2, 5, 22, 181, 5814, 1488565, 12194330294, 25573364166211253, 439347050970302571643057846, 15829145720289447797800874537321282579904181, 9797766637414564027586288536574448245991597197836000123235901011048118
OFFSET
0,3
COMMENTS
a(n) is also the denominator of the continued fraction [2^F(0), 2^F(1), 2^F(2), 2^F(3), 2^F(4), ..., 2^F(n-1)] for n>0. For the numerator, see A063896. - Chinmay Dandekar and Greg Dresden, Sep 11 2020
REFERENCES
N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence).
LINKS
J. L. Davison, A series and its associated continued fraction, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc., 63 (1977), 29-32.
H. W. Gould, J. B. Kim and V. E. Hoggatt, Jr., Sequences associated with t-ary coding of Fibonacci's rabbits, Fib. Quart., 15 (1977), 311-318.
Eric Weisstein's World of Mathematics, Rabbit Sequence
FORMULA
a(0) = 0, a(1) = 1, a(n) = a(n-1) * 2^F(n-1) + a(n-2).
a(n) = rewrite_0to1_1to10_n_i_times(0, n) [ Each 0->1, 1->10 in binary expansion ]
MAPLE
rewrite_0to1_1to10_n_i_times := proc(n, i) local z, j; z := n; j := i; while(j > 0) do z := rewrite_0to1_1to10(z); j := j - 1; od; RETURN(z); end;
rewrite_0to1_1to10 := proc(n) option remember; if(n < 2) then RETURN(n + 1); else RETURN(((2^(1+(n mod 2))) * rewrite_0to1_1to10(floor(n/2))) + (n mod 2) + 1); fi; end;
MATHEMATICA
a[0] = 0; a[1] = 1; a[n_] := a[n] = a[n-1]*2^Fibonacci[n-1] + a[n-2]; Table[a[n], {n, 0, 12}] (* Jean-François Alcover, Jul 27 2011 *)
KEYWORD
nonn,base
EXTENSIONS
Comments and more terms from Antti Karttunen, Mar 30 1999
STATUS
approved
First n elements of Thue-Morse sequence A010060 read as a binary number.
+10
8
0, 1, 3, 6, 13, 26, 52, 105, 211, 422, 844, 1689, 3378, 6757, 13515, 27030, 54061, 108122, 216244, 432489, 864978, 1729957, 3459915, 6919830, 13839660, 27679321, 55358643, 110717286, 221434573, 442869146, 885738292, 1771476585, 3542953171
OFFSET
0,3
LINKS
FORMULA
a(0) = 0, a(n+1) = 2a(n) + A010060(n). - Ralf Stephan, Sep 16 2003
MATHEMATICA
With[{tm=Nest[Flatten[#/.{0->{0, 1}, 1->{1, 0}}]&, {0}, 7]}, Table[ FromDigits[ Take[tm, n], 2], {n, 40}]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Mar 25 2015 *)
PROG
(Scheme)
(define rdc(lambda(x)(if(null? (cdr x))'()(cons (car x) (rdc (cdr x))))))
; if a bit is 1, get 2^i, where i is the index of that bit from right-left
(define F (lambda (c i)(if (eq? c #\1) (expt 2 i) 0)))
; gathers the sum of 2^index for all indices corresponding to a 1
(define fn (lambda (x sum i stop)(if (eq? i stop) sum (fn (list->string (rdc (string->list x))) (+ sum (F (string-ref x (-(string-length x) 1)) i)) (+ i 1)stop))))
(define f (lambda (x)(fn (substring thue 0 (+ x 1)) 0 0 (string-length (substring thue 0 (+ x 1))) )))
(define thue "0110100110010110") ; Feel free to add Thue-Morse sequence of whatever length here
; Ariel S Koiman, May 07 2013
(PARI) a(n)=sum(k=1, n, (hammingweight(k)%2)<<(n-k)) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, May 08 2016
(PARI) first(n)=my(v=vector(n)); v[1]=1; for(k=2, n, v[k]=2*v[k-1]+hammingweight(k)%2); concat(0, v) \\ Charles R Greathouse IV, May 08 2016
CROSSREFS
Cf. A010060, A048707, A320916 (bit reversal).
KEYWORD
nonn,easy
STATUS
approved
(Number of 1's in binary expansion of n) mod 3.
+10
7
0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 0, 1, 2, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 0, 1, 2, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 0
OFFSET
0,4
COMMENTS
This is the generalized Thue-Morse sequence t_3 (Allouche and Shallit, p. 335).
Ternary sequence which is a fixed point of the morphism 0 -> 01, 1 -> 12, 2 -> 20.
Sequence is T^(oo)(0) where T is the operator acting on any word on alphabet {0,1,2} by inserting 1 after 0, 2 after 1 and 0 after 2. For instance T(001)=010112, T(120)=122001. - Benoit Cloitre, Mar 02 2009
REFERENCES
J.-P. Allouche and J. Shallit, Automatic Sequences, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2003.
FORMULA
a(n) = A010872(A000120(n)).
Recurrence: a(2*n) = a(n), a(2*n+1) = (a(n)+1) mod 3.
a(n) = A000695(n) mod 3. - John M. Campbell, Jul 16 2016
MATHEMATICA
f[n_] := Mod[ Count[ IntegerDigits[n, 2], 1], 3]; Table[ f[n], {n, 0, 104}] (* Or *)
Nest[ Flatten[ # /. {0 -> {0, 1}, 1 -> {1, 2}, 2 -> {2, 0}}] &, {0}, 7] (* Robert G. Wilson v Mar 03 2005, modified May 17 2014 *)
Table[Mod[DigitCount[n, 2, 1], 3], {n, 0, 110}] (* Harvey P. Dale, Jul 01 2015 *)
PROG
(PARI) for(n=1, 200, print1(sum(i=1, length(binary(n)), component(binary(n), i))%3, ", "))
(PARI) map(d)=if(d==2, [2, 0], if(d==1, [1, 2], [0, 1]))
{m=53; v=[]; w=[0]; while(v!=w, v=w; w=[]; for(n=1, min(m, length(v)), w=concat(w, map(v[n])))); for(n=1, 2*m, print1(v[n], ", "))} \\ Klaus Brockhaus, Jun 23 2004
CROSSREFS
See A245555 for another version.
KEYWORD
nonn,easy
AUTHOR
Benoit Cloitre, Jun 09 2002
EXTENSIONS
Edited by Ralf Stephan, Dec 11 2004
STATUS
approved
Numerators of ratios converging to the Thue-Morse constant, converted to hexadecimal.
+10
3
0, 1, 6, 69, 6996, 69969669, 6996966996696996, 69969669966969969669699669969669, 6996966996696996966969966996966996696996699696696996966996696996
OFFSET
0,3
COMMENTS
Starting from the term 6, the next term can be obtained from the previous one by appending its "horizontally" flipped variant (6 <-> 9, which equals its binary complement). Also, starting from the term 69, every second term stays same if read upside down from the other end (i.e., those numbers look same even if you rotate them by 180 degrees).
FORMULA
map(convert, A048707, hex)
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn,base
AUTHOR
Antti Karttunen, Mar 09 1999
STATUS
approved
A080814 complemented, then interpreted as binary and then re-expressed in decimal form (e.g., "1221" = "0110"). Alternately, view as A080814 with "1" mapped to "1" and "2" mapped to "0".
+10
3
1, 2, 9, 150, 38505, 2523490710, 10838310072981296745, 199931532107794273605284333428918544790, 68033174967769840440887906939858451149105560803546820641877549596291376780905
OFFSET
0,2
COMMENTS
It appears that a(n) is the least positive number with binary expansion Sum_{k = 0..w} b_k * 2^k such that the polynomial Sum_{k = 0..w} (X+k)^n * (-1)^b_k is constant. - Rémy Sigrist, Sep 15 2020
FORMULA
The "~" operator, as used here, represents bitwise complement. a(0) = 1. a(n) = a(n-1) followed by ~a(n-1).
MATHEMATICA
FromDigits[#, 2] & /@ NestList[ Flatten[# /. {0 -> {0, 1}, 1 -> {1, 0}}] &, {1}, 9] (* Robert G. Wilson v, Aug 16 2011 *)
PROG
(Pseudocode)
function invert(string s) returns string { s.replace("0", "2"); s.replace("1", "0"); s.replace("2", "1"); }
function f(int n) returns string { if (n==0) return "1"; return concat(f(n-1), invert(f(n-1))); } // Blatant opportunity for optimization
function a(int n) returns int { return f(n).InterpretAsBinary(); }
CROSSREFS
KEYWORD
nonn,base
AUTHOR
Dan Reif (integer-sequences(AT)angelfaq.com), Nov 28 2007, corrected Nov 30 2007
STATUS
approved

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