I am not sure that I fully understand your question. If your coil pack is mounted to the front of the engine just above the starter the coils will attach in the order below. 4 3 5 (/) (/) (/) 1 6 2 Looking down from left to right spark plug wire 1 would be first followed by 4. The next coil would have plug wires 3 and 6. The last coil would be 2 and 5. The firing order for a 1993 3.1 liter v6 is 1 6 5 4 3 2. This a waste spark system that fires coils in paired cylinders. Hope this helps.
Any ordered set of numbers (and other things) is a sequence. There need not be any discernible pattern to the sequence (Brownian motion, for example), or a pattern which is understood only by the person who defined the sequence. With the last category in mind, every ordered set of numbers is a correct sequence.
You don't repeat numbers and use process of elimination.
There are no numbers before the sequence!
A sequence.
In The Da Vinci Code, Robert Langdon realized the Fibonacci sequence was the key to solving the cryptex puzzle by recognizing the sequence in the numbers on the Vitruvian Man painting. He used the Fibonacci sequence to determine the correct order of the letters in the password.
This is called a sequence and if we add the numbers in that sequence it is called a series.
To count a triplet in a sequence of numbers, look for three consecutive numbers that are the same. Count how many times this pattern occurs in the sequence.
An arithmetic sequence is a list of numbers which follow a rule. A series is the sum of a sequence of numbers.
They are a sequence of numbers and each sequence has a term number.
Arithmetic Sequence
Its indefinite: Start with 0,1 add last two numbers = 1 add to sequence = 0,1,1 add last two numbers = 2 add to sequence = 0,1,1,2 add last two numbers = 3 add to sequence = 0,1,1,2,3 add last two numbers = 5 add to sequence = 0,1,1,2,3,5 add last two numbers ......... add to sequence ..........
The number of inversions in a sequence of numbers is the count of pairs of elements that are out of order.