The Yellowstone Permutation is a sequence of positive integers, defined by the following rules:
- No term is repeated.
- Given n terms, the next term, a(n+1), is always the smallest possible integer.
- Every term, a(n), must be relatively prime to the previous term, a(n-1).
- Every term, a(n), must have a common divisor greater than 1 with the term before the previous, a(n-2).
The first three terms of the sequence, after which we start applying the rules, are [1 2 3].
Given a positive integer, n, return the n-th term of the sequence, a(n).
Example:
n = 4;
a = 4
Solution Stats
Problem Comments
Solution Comments
Show comments
Loading...
Problem Recent Solvers8
Suggested Problems
-
Program an exclusive OR operation with logical operators
751 Solvers
-
Project Euler: Problem 10, Sum of Primes
2124 Solvers
-
938 Solvers
-
Return fibonacci sequence do not use loop and condition
870 Solvers
-
Create cell array of numeric arrays
46 Solvers
More from this Author45
Problem Tags
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!