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 A096595 #5 Mar 31 2012 20:08:01 %S A096595 735,3792,7236,17482,19075,19276,32104,42175,104392,107329,123678, %T A096595 145273,149782,174082,174298,174982,237951,297463,319675,457192, %U A096595 459728,639175,840175,1093672,1236874,1259473,1268374,1283746,1286374,1374682 %N A096595 Numbers n with the property that n is an anagram of the digits of the distinct prime factors of n. %H A096595 Gil Broussard, <a href="http://home.mindspring.com/~kikiriki/id15.html">Integers Anagrammed by Their Unique Primes</a>. %F A096595 The digits of the unique prime factors of n appear exactly once within n in any order, accounting for all the digits of n %e A096595 Example: 104392, whose prime factors are 2*2*2*13049. The digits 2, 1, 3, 0, 4 and 9 appear exactly once within 104392. %Y A096595 Cf. A083359, A083360, A083361. %K A096595 base,nonn %O A096595 1,1 %A A096595 _Gil Broussard_, Aug 13 2004