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In mathematics, the binary game is a topological game introduced by Stanisław Ulam in 1935 in an addendum to problem 43 of the Scottish book as a variation of the Banach–Mazur game.

In the binary game, one is given a fixed subset X of the set {0,1}N of all sequences of 0s and 1s. The players take it in turn to choose a digit 0 or 1, and the first player wins if the sequence they form lies in the set X. Another way to represent this game is to pick a subset X of the interval [0,2] on the real line, then the players alternatively choose binary digits x0,x1,x2,.... Player I wins the game if and only if the binary number (x0.x1x2x3...)2X, that is, Σn=0xn2nX. See,[1] page 237.

The binary game is sometimes called Ulam's game, but "Ulam's game" usually refers to the Rényi–Ulam game.

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