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gikf 5a52c229f5 fix(curriculum): clean-up Project Euler 181-200 (#42819)
* fix: clean-up Project Euler 181-200

* fix: corrections from review

Co-authored-by: Tom <20648924+moT01@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix: missing delimiter

Co-authored-by: Tom <20648924+moT01@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-07-15 15:52:14 +02:00

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---
id: 5900f4331000cf542c50ff45
title: 'Problem 198: Ambiguous Numbers'
challengeType: 5
forumTopicId: 301836
dashedName: problem-198-ambiguous-numbers
---
# --description--
A best approximation to a real number $x$ for the denominator bound $d$ is a rational number $\frac{r}{s}$ (in reduced form) with $s ≤ d$, so that any rational number $\frac{p}{q}$ which is closer to $x$ than $\frac{r}{s}$ has $q > d$.
Usually the best approximation to a real number is uniquely determined for all denominator bounds. However, there are some exceptions, e.g. $\frac{9}{40}$ has the two best approximations $\frac{1}{4}$ and $\frac{1}{5}$ for the denominator bound $6$. We shall call a real number $x$ ambiguous, if there is at least one denominator bound for which $x$ possesses two best approximations. Clearly, an ambiguous number is necessarily rational.
How many ambiguous numbers $x = \frac{p}{q}$, $0 &lt; x &lt; \frac{1}{100}$, are there whose denominator $q$ does not exceed ${10}^8$?
# --hints--
`ambiguousNumbers()` should return `52374425`.
```js
assert.strictEqual(ambiguousNumbers(), 52374425);
```
# --seed--
## --seed-contents--
```js
function ambiguousNumbers() {
return true;
}
ambiguousNumbers();
```
# --solutions--
```js
// solution required
```