Signpost sequence

In mathematics and apportionment theory, a signpost sequence is a sequence of real numbers, called signposts, used in defining generalized rounding rules. A signpost sequence defines a set of signposts that mark the boundaries between neighboring whole numbers: a real number less than the signpost is rounded down, while numbers greater than the signpost are rounded up.

Signposts allow for a more general concept of rounding than the usual one. For example, the signposts of the rounding rule "always round down" (truncation) are given by the signpost sequence

Formal definition

Mathematically, a signpost sequence is a localized sequence, meaning the th signpost lies in the th interval with integer endpoints: for all . This allows us to define a general rounding function using the floor function:

Where exact equality can be handled with any tie-breaking rule, most often by rounding to the nearest even.

Applications

In the context of apportionment theory, signpost sequences are used in defining highest averages methods, a set of algorithms designed to achieve equal representation between different groups.

References


Uses material from the Wikipedia article Signpost sequence, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.