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Tiny improvements on the proof of the beta function lemma #159

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Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -77,7 +77,7 @@
A couple of observations will help us in this regard. Given
$y_0$, \dots,~$y_n$, let
\[
j = \max(n, y_0, \dots, y_n) + 1,
j = \max(n, y_0 + 1, \dots, y_n + 1),
\]
and let
\begin{align*}
Expand All @@ -101,10 +101,13 @@
Since $p$ divides $1 + (i+1)j\fac$, it can't divide $j\fac$ as well
(otherwise, the first division would leave a remainder of~$1$). So $p$
divides $i-k$, since $p$ divides $(i-k)j\fac$. But $\left| i-k
\right|$ is at most~$n$, and we have chosen $j > n$, so this implies
\right|$ is at most~$n$, and we have chosen $j \geq n$, so this implies
that $p \mid j\fac$, again a contradiction. So there is no prime
number dividing both $x_i$ and $x_k$. Clause (2) is easy: we have $y_i <
j < j\fac < x_i$.
j < j\fac < x_i$.\footnote{Using techniques of proof mining, it's possible to
extract from this argument an explicit certificate that~$x_i$ and~$x_k$ are
relatively prime: Writing $j! = (i-k)a$, we have $1 = (1 - (i+1)(i-k)a +
(i+1)^2 a) \cdot (1 + ij!) - (i+1)^2 a \cdot (1 + (k+1)j!)$.}

Now let us prove the $\beta$ function lemma. Remember that we can use
$0$, successor, plus, times, $\Char{=}$, projections, and any function
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