Well met with Fibonacci bigger brother, AKA Tribonacci.
As the name may already reveal, it works basically like a Fibonacci, but summing the last 3 (instead of 2) numbers of the sequence to generate the next. And, worse part of it, regrettably I won't get to hear non-native Italian speakers trying to pronounce it :(
So, if we are to start our Tribonacci sequence with [1, 1, 1]
as a starting input (AKA signature), we have this sequence:
[1, 1 ,1, 3, 5, 9, 17, 31, ...]
But what if we started with [0, 0, 1]
as a signature? As starting with [0, 1]
instead of [1, 1]
basically shifts the common Fibonacci sequence by once place, you may be tempted to think that we would get the same sequence shifted by 2 places, but that is not the case and we would get:
[0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 4, 7, 13, 24, ...]
Well, you may have guessed it by now, but to be clear: you need to create a fibonacci function that given a signature array/list, returns the first n elements - signature included of the so seeded sequence.
Signature will always contain 3 numbers; n will always be a non-negative number; if n == 0
, then return an empty array (except in C return NULL) and be ready for anything else which is not clearly specified ;)