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 A114259 #22 Feb 28 2024 01:41:19 %S A114259 87624375,88236519,516473892,569784132,576283194,623837409,652319574, %T A114259 726918453,751396842,865917402,876243750,882365190,908714352, %U A114259 984052317,996302784,4680215379,4721985066,4752360918,4765380219,4780620591,4816217505,4823206911,4857619623 %N A114259 Numbers k such that k^3 contains exactly 3 copies of each digit of k. %C A114259 All terms are divisible by 3. - _Chai Wah Wu_, Feb 27 2024 %H A114259 Yi Yang, <a href="/A114259/b114259.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..7886</a> %H A114259 Carlos Rivera, <a href="https://www.primepuzzles.net/puzzles/puzz_971.htm">Puzzle 971. The cube of N such that...</a>, The Prime Puzzles & Problems Connection. %e A114259 87624375 is in the sequence since its cube 672782675854638427734375 contains three 8's, six 7's, three 6's and so on. %Y A114259 Cf. A114258, A114260, A114261, A199631. %K A114259 base,nonn %O A114259 1,1 %A A114259 _Giovanni Resta_, Nov 18 2005