cp's OEIS Frontend

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.

A114209 Number of permutations of [n] having exactly two fixed points and avoiding the patterns 123 and 231.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 0, 2, 1, 3, 2, 5, 3, 7, 5, 9, 7, 12, 9, 15, 12, 18, 15, 22, 18, 26, 22, 30, 26, 35, 30, 40, 35, 45, 40, 51, 45, 57, 51, 63, 57, 70, 63, 77, 70, 84, 77, 92, 84, 100, 92, 108, 100, 117, 108, 126, 117, 135, 126, 145, 135, 155, 145, 165, 155, 176, 165, 187, 176, 198, 187
Offset: 1

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Author

Emeric Deutsch, Nov 17 2005

Keywords

Examples

			a(2)=1 because we have 12; a(3)=0 because no permutation of [3] can have exactly two fixed points; a(4)=2 because we have 1432 and 3214.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Maple
    a:=proc(n) if n mod 6 = 0 then n*(n+6)/24 elif n mod 6 = 1 or n mod 6 = 5 then (n^2-1)/24 elif n mod 6 = 2 or n mod 6 = 4 then (n+2)*(n+4)/24 else (n^2-9)/24 fi end: seq(a(n),n=1..70);

Formula

a(n) = n(n+6)/24 if n mod 6 = 0; (n^2-1)/24 if n mod 6 = 1 or 5; (n+2)(n+4)/24 if n mod 6 = 2 or 4; (n^2-9)/24 if n mod 6 = 3.
a(n) = A008731(n-2). O.g.f.: x^2/((1-x)^3(1+x)^2(1+x+x^2)). [R. J. Mathar, Aug 11 2008]