This site is supported by donations to The OEIS Foundation.

Counterexamples

From OeisWiki
Jump to: navigation, search


This article page is a stub, please help by expanding it.


A counterexample is an example that refutes a universal (“for all”) statement.[1]

For example, consider the following statement:

An even, prime-indexed triangular number plus 1 equals a prime number, while an odd, prime-indexed triangular minus 2 also equals a prime.

The statement is false and the smallest counterexample is the 31st triangular number, 496. We verify that 496 + 1 = 497 = 7 × 71. See A097785 for more counterexamples to this particular statement.

Searching for counterexamples

Beal's Conjecture

See Beal's Conjecture: a search for counterexamples.

See also

Notes

  1. Counterexamples, © 2008 by Bruce Ikenaga.