More about odd numbers in Pascal’s triangle

binomial-coefficientscombinatorics

Do you have any references to this interesting result? I could not find any…

The total number of odd numbers in the first $2^n$ rows of Pascal's triangle is $3^n$, $n>=0$.

It's easy to prove by induction based on the formula for the number of odds in row $n$ ($2^m$, where $m$ is the number of ones in the binary expansion of $n$).

Best Answer

The Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences lists as entry A006046

Total number of odd entries in first n rows of Pascal's triangle: a(0) = 0, a(1) = 1, a(2k) = 3*a(k), a(2k+1) = 2*a(k) + a(k+1)

which doesn't give the claim explicitly but makes it very clear implicitly. Further down, in the formula section, you can find it explicitly:

a(2^n) = 3^n. - Henry Bottomley, Apr 05 2001