Antidiagonals in ℕ × ℕ as multisets #
This file defines the antidiagonals of ℕ × ℕ as multisets: the n-th antidiagonal is the multiset
of pairs (i, j) such that i + j = n. This is useful for polynomial multiplication and more
generally for sums going from 0 to n.
Notes #
This refines file Data.List.NatAntidiagonal and is further refined by file
Data.Finset.NatAntidiagonal.
The antidiagonal of a natural number n is
the multiset of pairs (i, j) such that i + j = n.
Equations
Instances For
@[simp]
The cardinality of the antidiagonal of n is n+1.
@[simp]
The antidiagonal of 0 is the list [(0, 0)]
@[simp]
The antidiagonal of n does not contain duplicate entries.
@[simp]
theorem
Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal_succ
{n : ℕ}
:
Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal (n + 1) = (0, n + 1) ::ₘ Multiset.map (Prod.map Nat.succ id) (Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal n)
theorem
Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal_succ'
{n : ℕ}
:
Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal (n + 1) = (n + 1, 0) ::ₘ Multiset.map (Prod.map id Nat.succ) (Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal n)
theorem
Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal_succ_succ'
{n : ℕ}
:
Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal (n + 2) = (0, n + 2) ::ₘ (n + 2, 0) ::ₘ Multiset.map (Prod.map Nat.succ Nat.succ) (Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal n)
theorem
Multiset.Nat.map_swap_antidiagonal
{n : ℕ}
:
Multiset.map Prod.swap (Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal n) = Multiset.Nat.antidiagonal n