This is a front-end for the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, made by Christian Perfect. The idea is to provide OEIS entries in non-ancient HTML, and then to think about how they're presented visually. The source code is on GitHub.
%I A080329 #8 Mar 30 2012 18:34:55 %S A080329 0,0,2,3,4,6,8,11,13,16,18,26,28,36,36,47,47,53,36,53,69,69,69,69,69, %T A080329 97,99,102,106,69,69,102,97,145,102,106,175,177,180,102,189,180,206, %U A080329 206,219,189,236,238,241,206,189,258,260,180,273,219,316,316,282,339 %N A080329 Larger of the two Ulam numbers that sum to the n-th Ulam number. %C A080329 The first two are zero because the Ulam sequence (A002858) is initialized for those terms. The smaller term in the sum is in A080328 and the indices are in A080330 and A080331. %H A080329 T. D. Noe, <a href="/A080329/b080329.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n=1..10000</a> %e A080329 The 11th Ulam number (26) is the sum of the 6th Ulam number (8) and the 10th Ulam number (18), so a(11)=18. %Y A080329 Cf. A002858, A080328, A080330, A080331. %K A080329 nonn %O A080329 1,3 %A A080329 _Jud McCranie_, Feb 15 2003