On wikipedia I read about the continued fraction of the square root of 2:
$$1+\frac{1}{2+\frac{1}{2+\frac{1}{2+\frac{1}{...}}}}$$
The first convergents are $\frac{1}{1},\frac{3}{2},\frac{7}{5},\frac{17}{12},\frac{41}{29}$. They say that if $\frac{p}{q}$ is one convergent, $\frac{p+2q}{p+q}$ will be the next.
This seems to be right, but is there a proof for it.
There also seems to be a recursive formula for the numerator and the denominator:
$a(n) = 2a(n-1) + a(n-2)$: the numerator is twice the last numerator plus the numerator before that one.
It's the same for the denominator, but with different starting values.
So is there a proof for these formulas?