Basic Definitions/Theorems for Continued Fractions #
Summary #
We define generalised, simple, and regular continued fractions and functions to evaluate their convergents. We follow the naming conventions from Wikipedia and [Wal18], Chapter 1.
Main definitions #
- Generalised continued fractions (gcfs)
- Simple continued fractions (scfs)
- (Regular) continued fractions ((r)cfs)
- Computation of convergents using the recurrence relation in
convs. - Computation of convergents by directly evaluating the fraction described by the gcf in
convs'.
Implementation notes #
- The most commonly used kind of continued fractions in the literature are regular continued fractions. We hence just call them
ContFractin the library. - We use sequences from
Data.Seqto encode potentially infinite sequences.
References #
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalized_continued_fraction
- Wall, H.S., Analytic Theory of Continued Fractions
Tags #
numerics, number theory, approximations, fractions
Definitions #
We collect a partial numerator aᵢ and partial denominator bᵢ in a pair ⟨aᵢ, bᵢ⟩.
- a : α
Partial numerator
- b : α
Partial denominator
Instances For
Equations
Interlude: define some expected coercions and instances.
Make a GenContFract.Pair printable.
Equations
- GenContFract.Pair.instRepr = { reprPrec := fun (p : GenContFract.Pair α) (x : ℕ) => Std.Format.text "(a : " ++ repr p.a ++ Std.Format.text ", b : " ++ repr p.b ++ Std.Format.text ")" }
The coercion between numerator-denominator pairs happens componentwise.
Instances For
Coerce a pair by elementwise coercion.
Equations
A generalised continued fraction (gcf) is a potentially infinite expression of the form $$ h + \dfrac{a_0} {b_0 + \dfrac{a_1} {b_1 + \dfrac{a_2} {b_2 + \dfrac{a_3} {b_3 + \dots}}}} $$ where h is called the head term or integer part, the aᵢ are called the partial numerators and the bᵢ the partial denominators of the gcf. We store the sequence of partial numerators and denominators in a sequence of GenContFract.Pairs s. For convenience, one often writes [h; (a₀, b₀), (a₁, b₁), (a₂, b₂),...].
- h : α
Head term
- s : Stream'.Seq (Pair α)
Sequence of partial numerator and denominator pairs.
Instances For
Constructs a generalized continued fraction without fractional part.
Equations
- GenContFract.ofInteger a = { h := a, s := Stream'.Seq.nil }
Instances For
Equations
- GenContFract.instInhabited = { default := GenContFract.ofInteger default }
Returns the sequence of partial numerators aᵢ of g.
Equations
Instances For
Returns the sequence of partial denominators bᵢ of g.
Equations
Instances For
A gcf terminated at position n if its sequence terminates at position n.
Equations
- g.TerminatedAt n = g.s.TerminatedAt n
Instances For
It is decidable whether a gcf terminated at a given position.
Equations
Interlude: define some expected coercions.
The coercion between GenContFract happens on the head term and all numerator-denominator pairs componentwise.
Equations
- ↑g = { h := Coe.coe g.h, s := Stream'.Seq.map GenContFract.Pair.coeFn g.s }
Instances For
Coerce a gcf by elementwise coercion.
Equations
- GenContFract.instCoe = { coe := GenContFract.coeFn }
A generalized continued fraction is a simple continued fraction if all partial numerators are equal to one. $$ h + \dfrac{1} {b_0 + \dfrac{1} {b_1 + \dfrac{1} {b_2 + \dfrac{1} {b_3 + \dots}}}} $$
Instances For
A simple continued fraction (scf) is a generalized continued fraction (gcf) whose partial numerators are equal to one. $$ h + \dfrac{1} {b_0 + \dfrac{1} {b_1 + \dfrac{1} {b_2 + \dfrac{1} {b_3 + \dots}}}} $$ For convenience, one often writes [h; b₀, b₁, b₂,...]. It is encoded as the subtype of gcfs that satisfy GenContFract.IsSimpContFract.
Equations
- SimpContFract α = { g : GenContFract α // g.IsSimpContFract }
Instances For
Constructs a simple continued fraction without fractional part.
Equations
Instances For
Equations
- SimpContFract.instInhabited = { default := SimpContFract.ofInteger 1 }
Lift a scf to a gcf using the inclusion map.
Equations
A simple continued fraction is a (regular) continued fraction ((r)cf) if all partial denominators bᵢ are positive, i.e. 0 < bᵢ.
Instances For
A (regular) continued fraction ((r)cf) is a simple continued fraction (scf) whose partial denominators are all positive. It is the subtype of scfs that satisfy SimpContFract.IsContFract.
Equations
- ContFract α = { s : SimpContFract α // s.IsContFract }
Instances For
Interlude: define some expected coercions.
Constructs a continued fraction without fractional part.
Equations
Instances For
Equations
- ContFract.instInhabited = { default := ContFract.ofInteger 0 }
Lift a cf to a scf using the inclusion map.
Equations
- ContFract.instCoeSimpContFract = { coe := Subtype.val }
Lift a cf to a scf using the inclusion map.
Equations
- ContFract.instCoeGenContFract = { coe := fun (c : ContFract α) => ↑↑c }
Computation of Convergents #
We now define how to compute the convergents of a gcf. There are two standard ways to do this: directly evaluating the (infinite) fraction described by the gcf or using a recurrence relation. For (r)cfs, these computations are equivalent as shown in Algebra.ContinuedFractions.ConvergentsEquiv.
We start with the definition of the recurrence relation. Given a gcf g, for all n ≥ 1, we define
A₋₁ = 1, A₀ = h, Aₙ = bₙ₋₁ * Aₙ₋₁ + aₙ₋₁ * Aₙ₋₂, andB₋₁ = 0, B₀ = 1, Bₙ = bₙ₋₁ * Bₙ₋₁ + aₙ₋₁ * Bₙ₋₂.
Aₙ, Bₙ are called the nth continuants, Aₙ the nth numerator, and Bₙ the nth denominator of g. The nth convergent of g is given by Aₙ / Bₙ.
Returns the next continuants ⟨Aₙ, Bₙ⟩ using nextNum and nextDen, where pred is ⟨Aₙ₋₁, Bₙ₋₁⟩, ppred is ⟨Aₙ₋₂, Bₙ₋₂⟩, a is aₙ₋₁, and b is bₙ₋₁.
Equations
- GenContFract.nextConts a b ppred pred = { a := GenContFract.nextNum a b ppred.a pred.a, b := GenContFract.nextDen a b ppred.b pred.b }
Instances For
Returns the continuants ⟨Aₙ₋₁, Bₙ₋₁⟩ of g.
Equations
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Returns the continuants ⟨Aₙ, Bₙ⟩ of g.
Instances For
Returns the numerators Aₙ of g.
Equations
Instances For
Returns the denominators Bₙ of g.
Equations
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Returns the convergents Aₙ / Bₙ of g, where Aₙ, Bₙ are the nth continuants of g.
Instances For
Returns the approximation of the fraction described by the given sequence up to a given position n. For example, convs'Aux [(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)] 2 = 1 / (2 + 3 / 4) and convs'Aux [(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)] 0 = 0.
Equations
- GenContFract.convs'Aux x✝ 0 = 0
- GenContFract.convs'Aux x✝ n.succ = match x✝.head with | none => 0 | some gp => gp.a / (gp.b + GenContFract.convs'Aux x✝.tail n)