FoxTrot by Bill Amend for February 08, 2009

  1. Cat in lime helmet
    sappha58  about 15 years ago

    For those who don’t know… Fibonacci Series: The first number of the sequence is 0, the second number is 1, and each subsequent number is equal to the sum of the previous two numbers of the sequence itself, yielding the sequence 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, etc.

     •  Reply
  2. Statler
    HeckleMeElmo  about 15 years ago

    Why’s Peter complaining? He gets his three squares a day.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    tiger1tt  about 15 years ago

    neat method of informing d masses …i for one did not catch d pun until i read sappha 1958 comment…i have been enriched

     •  Reply
  4. Album cover
    kfaatz925  about 15 years ago

    Only squares, treblemaker? In Peter’s case I’d have said cubes.

     •  Reply
  5. Presidential seal
    m_ortal  about 15 years ago

    13, 21…

     •  Reply
  6. Durak ukraine
    Durak Premium Member about 15 years ago

    I always appreciate how Amend expects us to know and understand the joke, and doesnt have to explain it. The ‘Fibonachos’ punchline was great though! Amend gives his readers credit for being smart enough to get his jokes. Laugh, a search for fibonacho’s on Wiki actually refers you to fibonaci!

    In the book/movie, “The Phantom Tollbooth” there is a well done sequance on the Fibonaci series. Tiger itt mentioned informing the masses, getting kids to read that book would do it. Or at least see the movie.

     •  Reply
  7. Calvin 20naked 20resize
    Mowgli-Chiara  about 15 years ago

    Thanks for made my brain to work on a Sunday

     •  Reply
  8. Owl
    Boxknight_Jace  about 15 years ago

    Dypak, The Phantom Tollbooth is one of the best novels out there. Everyone should read it as a kid and then again as an adult.

     •  Reply
  9. Zippy56995996595959995956959599956956599569511111122222333333
    Hugh B. Hayve  about 15 years ago

    I guess when they’re older they’ll be playing Fibeernacci.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    Geekologist  about 15 years ago

    Whats sad is I didn’t know what “Fibonachos” are till I read the comments…

     •  Reply
  11. 20080419wi15739620 wi
    bigmitchperez  about 15 years ago

    luckily i play video games ,like “the da vinci code”,otherwise i may seem undereducated!

     •  Reply
  12. Tardy
    LateToTheGame  about 15 years ago

    Hugh, awesome!!! Though I imagine at whatever age, Jason and Marcus would barely be able to hold a single draught, at most.

     •  Reply
  13. 535658 339209472866364 1297576458 n
    cwreenactor  about 15 years ago

    Arrrrgggghhhhh!!!!

     •  Reply
  14. Dim2
    farren  about 15 years ago

    Johndrake: they’re talking about the Alternative Minimal Fibonacci series: 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, …

     •  Reply
  15. But eo
    Rakkav  about 15 years ago

    Very clever!

     •  Reply
  16. Ba071203
    circuit7  about 15 years ago

    ROFL! What a great laugh!

    And The Phantom Tollbooth should be required reading for every 12-year-old in the civilized world.

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    Mickeysnotadog  about 15 years ago

    Yulk! They are double dipping! Too many germos here. They could Fibonacci themselves into the ICU.

     •  Reply
  18. Tardy
    LateToTheGame  about 15 years ago

    drake, it sounds to me like the version you heard was drafted for some youngsters – I can’t imagine Fibonacci using bunny wabbits for part of his original thesis. As for the bunnies, 0 was probably left off since not too many spontaneously reproduce. Now if it were frogs or sharks perhaps…

     •  Reply
  19. Picture 1
    Liowatcher  about 15 years ago

    According to Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibonachi): —– Liber Abaci also posed, and solved, a problem involving the growth of a hypothetical population of rabbits based on idealized assumptions. The solution, generation by generation, was a sequence of numbers later known as Fibonacci numbers. The number sequence was known to Indian mathematicians as early as the 6th century, but it was Fibonacci’s Liber Abaci that introduced it to the West. —– So he did use rabbits, and in Latin!

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    tobybartels  about 15 years ago

    It's arbitrary where you start the sequence. In fact, it can go infinitely far in either direction. As you go forwards, you add two numbers to get the next. But as you go backwards, you subtract them instead. So you get something like this:

    …, 8, −5, 3, −2, 1, −1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, …

    It is true that Fibonacci himself started with 1, 1, 2, …, whereas nowadays most people prefer to start with 0, 1, 1, …. But in the end, where you start is up to you.

    You can also get fun results starting with any two numbers, even if they don't appear in the Fibonacci sequence. For example, Édouard Lucas started with 1, 3, 4, …, so those are called the Lucas numbers. Bonus points for spotting where the Lucas numbers are hiding within the Fibonacci sequence!

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    tobybartels  about 15 years ago

    We have a winner! Johndrake gets a cookie, or whatever the kids are giving each other on the Internet these days.

     •  Reply
  22. Tardy
    LateToTheGame  about 15 years ago

    Would that be a virus?

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    slavesofspeigel  about 15 years ago

    1;1;2;3;5;8;13;21;34;55;89;144;233;377;610; 987;1,597;2,584;4181;6,765

    The first 20 numbers of fibonacci! (Ithink

     •  Reply
  24. Missing large
    zev.farkas  about 15 years ago

    I love when Amend gets scientific/mathematical! Thanks to all who commented. Particular thanks to johndrake for the comment about the relationship between the Fibonacci and Lucas series and Pythagorean triples! This is a fascinating result that I had not known about. I actually went to the trouble of working it out algebraically (tedious, but not too difficult) and it works out! Cool! It turns out that it works for any series where p(n)=p(n-2)+p(n-1).

    as for the following:

    “tobybartels says:

    It’s arbitrary where you start the sequence. In fact, it can go infinitely far in either direction. As you go forwards, you add two numbers to get the next. But as you go backwards, you subtract them instead. So you get something like this:

    …, 8, −5, 3, −2, 1, −1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, ”

    please check the transition from alternating negatives and positives to all positives… -1+0=-1, not 1.

    There is a closed-form solution to the Fibonacci series that involves the square root of 5, among other things… see what happens when you plug in negative arguments in that function (sorry, but it’s too late at night, and I’m too lazy, for figuring that one out right now - you’re on your own, math fans…)

    Finally, as to whether the Fibonacci series starts with zero or one, I think it’s just a matter of taste or the particular problem you’re working on.

    Reminds me of an old story. A couple comes to a Rabbi for help in settling a marital dispute. The wife tells her side, and the Rabbi says, “You’re right”. Then the husband gives his side, and the Rabbi says, “You’re right”. This seems to satisfy the couple, and they leave smiling. The Rabbi’s wife, who overheard the whole session says, “It can’t be possible that they’re both right!”, and the Rabbi says, “You’re also right!” :)

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    zev.farkas  about 15 years ago

    Thanks, johndrake -

    As an American transplanted to Israel, that mile to kilometer converter can be pretty convenient!

    Your comment on the relationship between the Fibonacci series and pythagorean triples helped me find a result I’ve been trying to come up with for some years now… a simple relationship that takes any two numbers and gives a pythagorean triple - like the age game you just described. (I’m sure I could have found it on the web, but it’s more fun to crank out the algebra yourself…)

    Thanks again!

     •  Reply
  26. 453135 sunny one smiley face rubber ball
    bookworm1011  about 9 years ago

    I love the phantom tollbooth!

     •  Reply
  27. Image
    Foxtrotlover  about 6 years ago

    I read this, studied it, and figured out what exactly Fibonacci was.

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    colBoh  over 5 years ago

    Should’ve started with one “1” instead of two. Then they’d have 13.

     •  Reply
  29. Pxl 20221009 021917563
    Boxo croco says happy derby  about 4 years ago

    How many nachos are there in that bowl?

     •  Reply
  30. Image
    Empress of Dragons   almost 4 years ago

    Huh?

     •  Reply
  31. Aoh14ggbxnhciah8vhsrbg00hgzawvzpojiioknci6xs
    TheJustinator  over 3 years ago

    1 1 2 3 5 8 … hmm.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From FoxTrot