Hailstone sequence
The Hailstone sequence of numbers can be generated from a starting positive integer, n by:
- If n is 1 then the sequence ends.
- If n is even then the next n of the sequence
= n/2
- If n is odd then the next n of the sequence
= (3 * n) + 1
![Task](http://static.miraheze.org/rosettacodewiki/thumb/b/ba/Rcode-button-task-crushed.png/64px-Rcode-button-task-crushed.png)
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
The (unproven), Collatz conjecture is that the hailstone sequence for any starting number always terminates.
The task is to:
- Create a routine to generate the hailstone sequence for a number.
- Use the routine to show that the hailstone sequence for the number 27 has 112 elements starting with
27, 82, 41, 124
and ending with8, 4, 2, 1
- Show the number less than 100,000 which has the longest hailstone sequence together with that sequences length.
(But don't show the actual sequence)!
Python
<lang python>def hailstone(n):
seq = [n] while n>1: n = 3*n + 1 if n & 1 else n//2 seq.append(n) return seq
if __name__ == '__main__':
h = hailstone(27) assert len(h)==112 and h[:4]==[27, 82, 41, 124] and h[-4:]==[8, 4, 2, 1] print("Maximum length %i was found for hailstone(%i) for numbers <100,000" % max((len(hailstone(i)), i) for i in range(1,100000)))</lang>
Sample Output
Maximum length 351 was found for hailstone(77031) for numbers <100,000
Tcl
<lang tcl>proc hailstone n {
while 1 {
lappend seq $n if {$n == 1} {return $seq} set n [expr {$n & 1 ? $n*3+1 : $n/2}]
}
}
set h27 [hailstone 27] puts "h27 len=[llength $h27]" puts "head4 = [lrange $h27 0 3]" puts "tail4 = [lrange $h27 end-3 end]"
set maxlen [set max 0] for {set i 1} {$i<100000} {incr i} {
set l [llength [hailstone $i]] if {$l>$maxlen} {set maxlen $l;set max $i}
} puts "max is $max, with length $maxlen"</lang> Output:
h27 len=112 head4 = 27 82 41 124 tail4 = 8 4 2 1 max is 77031, with length 351