The numbers in a sequence are called terms. Each term represents a specific position within the sequence, and they can follow a particular pattern or rule. For example, in the sequence of even numbers (2, 4, 6, 8), each number is a term that adheres to the rule of being an even integer.
numbers
It is an ordered sequence.
It is called arithmetico-geometric sequence. I have added a link with some nice information about them.
A sequence of numbers in which the difference between any two consecutive terms is the same is called an arithmetic sequence or arithmetic progression. For example, in the sequence 2, 5, 8, 11, the common difference is 3. This consistent difference allows for predictable patterns and calculations within the sequence.
Each number in a sequence is called a "term." The sequence itself is an ordered list of these terms, which can follow a specific pattern or rule. Terms can be finite or infinite, depending on whether the sequence has a defined endpoint or continues indefinitely.
This is called a sequence and if we add the numbers in that sequence it is called a series.
Arithmetic Sequence
Sequence
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sequence
It is a sequence of numbers which is called an arithmetic, or linear, sequence.
Because the sequence was discovered and studied by Fibonacci of Pisa
The sequence 112358 is called the Fibonacci sequence. This is a series of numbers where each number after the first two is the sum of the two preceding ones.
I believe a ordered set of operations is called a sequence
Chronological order An ordered list of numbers is a "numerical sequence".
It is an ordered sequence.
A set of numbers that follows a particular pattern is called a sequence. My math teacher tells us that like it's rocket science! :P