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I need to find integer x with which function's y gets lowest integer values $f(x)=\frac{x^2-x-17}{x-2}$

I tried to find derivative, but it never equals 0. Other steps was to change expression $f(x)=\frac{x^2-x-17}{x-2}=1+\frac{(x-5)(x+3)}{x-2}=x-2+\frac{3(x-7)}{x-2}$ But didn't notice any solutions

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    Ross & Templar: sorry for your comments but I somehow confused integer and natural. If you want, you can repost them...2011-03-08

3 Answers 3

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If you want $x$ and $f(x)$ to both be integers, you have a Diophantine equation. Expressing $f(x)=x+1-\frac{15}{x-2}$ is the key, as you need the fraction to be integral. The only ways to have that is for $x-2$ to equal $\pm 1,3,5$, or $15$ and you can just try all eight.

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For $n < -13$ we have $n+1 < f(n) < n+2$ and so $f(n)$ is not an integer for integer $n$.

For $n > 17$ we have $n < f(n) < n+1$ amd so $f(n)$ is not an integer for integer $n$.

So you just have to check the 31 integers remaining. The integer values are $f(-13)=-11$, $f(-3)=1$, $f(-1)=5$, $f(1)=17$, $f(3)=-11$, $f(5)=1$, $f(7)=5$, $f(17)=17$. So the integer minima are $-11$ when $n=-13$ or $n=3$.

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Suppose that $\rm\:p(x)\in \mathbb Z[x]\:.\ $ By the root-factor theorem we have $\rm\ p(x)\ \equiv\ p(2)\ \ (mod\ x-2)\ $ Therefore $\rm\ x-2\ |\ p(x)\ \Rightarrow\ x-2\ |\ p(2)\ \Rightarrow\ |x-2| \le |p(2)|\:.\ $ This inequality constrains the possible solutions to a finite set which can be explicitly tested. Now put $\rm\ p(x) = x^2 -x - 17\:.$