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Given base $b$ a number of the form $d({{b^n - 1} \over {b - 1}})$ for $n > 0$ and $0 < d < b$ is written using using the digit $d$ only, $n$ times in that base and is therefore a repdigit. The term, short for "repeated digit," is credited to Beiler's book Recreations in the theory of numbers, in chapter 11.
When $d = 1$ the resulting repdigit is called a repunit. Only repunits can also be prime (and even then they are rare). No other repdigit can be prime since it is obvious that it is a multiple of a repunit.
In a trivial way, all repdigits are palindromic numbers.
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"repdigit" is owned by CompositeFan. [ owner history (1) ]
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repunit (Definition) by PrimeFan
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Cross-references: palindromic numbers, multiple, obvious, prime, repunit, theory, term, digit, number, base
There is 1 reference to this entry.
This is version 2 of repdigit, born on 2006-10-23, modified 2006-10-23.
Object id is 8468, canonical name is Repdigit.
Accessed 900 times total.
Classification:
| AMS MSC: | 11A63 (Number theory :: Elementary number theory :: Radix representation; digital problems) |
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Pending Errata and Addenda
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