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 A108810 #14 Apr 03 2023 10:36:10 %S A108810 10153331,10173133,10233221,10311533,10322321,12103331,12163133, %T A108810 12163331,12193133,12311933,12313319,15103133,15233221,15311633, %U A108810 15331931,15333119,16153133,16153331,16173133,16331531,16331831,16333117,17143331,17311633,17331031,18103133 %N A108810 Self-describing primes. %C A108810 Self-descriptive numbers are read in pairs of digits. %C A108810 This uses a different method from A047841. Here the digits are described in any order, whereas in A047841 they must be described in increasing order. %D A108810 Computed by Jud McCranie. %D A108810 Mudge, 'Numbers Count', Personal Computer World, Jun 15 1996 %H A108810 Giovanni Resta, <a href="/A108810/b108810.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..10000</a> %H A108810 Prime Curios, <a href="https://t5k.org/curios/page.php/10153331.html">Self-describing primes</a> %e A108810 E.g. 10153331 reads "One 0, one 5, three 3's and three 1's", which does indeed describe 10153331. %Y A108810 Cf. A047841, A059504, A109775, A109776, A173101. %K A108810 nonn,base,fini %O A108810 1,1 %A A108810 _G. L. Honaker, Jr._, Jul 12 2005 %E A108810 More terms from _Giovanni Resta_, Aug 14 2019