What do they want you to do?I am asking because my school REQUIRES the longer approach to the conclusion (and they are notorious for deducting marks for the smallest ambiguities or such).
Get rid of the IFF, doesn't work.For a strict school, is this conclusion perfect (without flaws/ambiguities/etc)?
"Statement true for n = k+1 IFF true for n = k. Since statement true for n = n0 (base case), therefore true for all n >= n0 by mathematical induction"
Feel free to attack me
oh reallyI do. Since true for n=1, also must be true for n=2,3..., therefore true for all>=0
What do you mean it does not work? :S Just if then?Get rid of the IFF, doesn't work.
Just say if.What do you mean it does not work? :S Just if then?
Edit: I did a quick google and it says something about "A iff B" implies that A is true only if B is true, and B is true if A is true. Or something like that. But the problem is that it's one sided and such we say "A if B" for the case of A: n = k+1 and B: n = k?
Oh damn. Thanks for clarifyingJust say if.
"n=k+1 is true IFF n=k is true" implies that for n=k+1 to be true then n=k MUST be true. However take the base case n=0. It is true, but n=-1 is not true, which is a contradiction.
Mathematical elegance shouldn't come from throwing around cool terminology such as "IFF", nor should you purposely try to look elegant otherwise that elegance becomes forced and fake.I agree, but really I am just trying to progress my mathematical elegance. It might not be my strongest subject but I like best myself.