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I got: 1 - 1/n! + n/(n+1)! (only after a manipulation of my answer, I did not get it directly).Is the answer 1-1/n!-n/(n+1)! ?
A quick (though crude) way to check your answers to things like this is chuck in n=1.Is the answer 1-1/n!-n/(n+1)! ?
No-one else seems to be answering it, so:A good Putnam problem that can be done with elementary knowledge
 \left ( \frac{3^3-1}{3^3+1}\right ) \left(\frac{4^3-1}{4^3+1} \right ) \left(\frac{5^3-1}{5^3 + 1} \right ) \dots \dots )
Slightly advanced for 3U students + 3U marathon forum seems to be dead so i'll just post it here:
 + \tan^{-1}(\frac{1}{8}) + \tan^{-1}(\frac{1}{18}) +...+ \tan^{-1}(\frac{1}{2n^2}) = \frac{\pi}{4} - \tan^{-1}(\frac{1}{2n+1}) )
If not using the calculator at all, the only logic I can think of is--> we know 2^10 (1024) is slightly greater than 10^3
From inspection,
and substituting in appropriately.
Thus
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Yep that is quite accurate of an estimate, the correct value is 302If not using the calculator at all, the only logic I can think of is--> we know 2^10 (1024) is slightly greater than 10^3
So (2^10)^100 should be slightly greater than (10^3)^100=10^300--> So it should have slightly more than 300 digits, I would estimate 310(is that in give or take 50 range?)
 
				