Remark 15.59.11. In fact, we can do better than Lemma 15.59.10. Namely, we can find a quasi-isomorphism $P^\bullet \to M^\bullet $ where $P^\bullet $ is a complex of $R$-modules endowed with a filtration
by subcomplexes such that
$P^\bullet = \bigcup F_ pP^\bullet $,
the inclusions $F_ iP^\bullet \to F_{i + 1}P^\bullet $ are termwise split injections,
the quotients $F_{i + 1}P^\bullet /F_ iP^\bullet $ are isomorphic to direct sums of shifts $R[k]$ (as complexes, so differentials are zero).
This will be shown in Differential Graded Algebra, Lemma 22.20.4. Moreover, given such a complex we obtain a distinguished triangle
in $D(R)$. Using this we can sometimes reduce statements about general complexes to statements about $R[k]$ (this of course only works if the statement is preserved under taking direct sums). More precisely, let $T$ be a property of objects of $D(R)$. Suppose that
if $K_ i \in D(R)$, $i \in I$ is a family of objects with $T(K_ i)$ for all $i \in I$, then $T(\bigoplus K_ i)$,
if $K \to L \to M \to K[1]$ is a distinguished triangle and $T$ holds for two, then $T$ holds for the third object,
$T(R[k])$ holds for all $k$.
Then $T$ holds for all objects of $D(R)$.
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