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freeCodeCamp/curriculum/challenges/english/10-coding-interview-prep/project-euler/problem-473-phigital-number-base.md
Oliver Eyton-Williams ee1e8abd87 feat(curriculum): restore seed + solution to Chinese (#40683)
* feat(tools): add seed/solution restore script

* chore(curriculum): remove empty sections' markers

* chore(curriculum): add seed + solution to Chinese

* chore: remove old formatter

* fix: update getChallenges

parse translated challenges separately, without reference to the source

* chore(curriculum): add dashedName to English

* chore(curriculum): add dashedName to Chinese

* refactor: remove unused challenge property 'name'

* fix: relax dashedName requirement

* fix: stray tag

Remove stray `pre` tag from challenge file.

Signed-off-by: nhcarrigan <nhcarrigan@gmail.com>

Co-authored-by: nhcarrigan <nhcarrigan@gmail.com>
2021-01-12 19:31:00 -07:00

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---
id: 5900f5461000cf542c510058
title: 'Problem 473: Phigital number base'
challengeType: 5
forumTopicId: 302150
dashedName: problem-473-phigital-number-base
---
# --description--
Let $\\varphi$ be the golden ratio: $\\varphi=\\frac{1+\\sqrt{5}}{2}.$
Remarkably it is possible to write every positive integer as a sum of powers of $\\varphi$ even if we require that every power of $\\varphi$ is used at most once in this sum.
Even then this representation is not unique.
We can make it unique by requiring that no powers with consecutive exponents are used and that the representation is finite.
E.g:
$2=\\varphi+\\varphi^{-2}$ and $3=\\varphi^{2}+\\varphi^{-2}$
To represent this sum of powers of $\\varphi$ we use a string of 0's and 1's with a point to indicate where the negative exponents start. We call this the representation in the phigital numberbase. So $1=1*{\\varphi}$, $2=10.01*{\\varphi}$, $3=100.01*{\\varphi}$ and $14=100100.001001*{\\varphi}$. The strings representing 1, 2 and 14 in the phigital number base are palindromic, while the string representing 3 is not. (the phigital point is not the middle character).
The sum of the positive integers not exceeding 1000 whose phigital representation is palindromic is 4345.
Find the sum of the positive integers not exceeding $10^{10}$ whose phigital representation is palindromic.
# --hints--
`euler473()` should return 35856681704365.
```js
assert.strictEqual(euler473(), 35856681704365);
```
# --seed--
## --seed-contents--
```js
function euler473() {
return true;
}
euler473();
```
# --solutions--
```js
// solution required
```