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.

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A331468 Lexicographically earliest sequence of distinct triples (A,B,C) such that A + B = C with A, B, C anagrams of each other and A < B.

Original entry on oeis.org

459, 495, 954, 1089, 8019, 9108, 1089, 8091, 9180, 1269, 1692, 2961, 1467, 6147, 7614, 1467, 6174, 7641, 1476, 4671, 6147, 1503, 3510, 5013, 1530, 3501, 5031, 1746, 4671, 6417, 2385, 2853, 5238, 2439, 2493, 4932, 2502, 2520, 5022, 2538, 3285, 5823, 2691, 6921, 9612, 2853, 5382, 8235, 3285, 5238, 8523
Offset: 1

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Author

Eric Angelini and Gilles Esposito-Farèse, Jan 17 2020

Keywords

Comments

The sequence is infinite as (10*A,10*B,10*C) is a legal triple if (A,B,C) is a legal triple.
From Bernard Schott, Jan 19 2020: (Start)
Theorem: Every term of this sequence is divisible by 9.
Proof: If m = digsum(A) = digsum(B) = digsum(C) where digsum = A007953, then A + B = C implies digsum(A) + digsum(B) == digsum(C) (mod 9), so 2*m == m (mod 9) and m == 0 (mod 9). (End)
The numbers of 3-digit to 8-digit triples are: 1, 25, 648, 17338, 495014, and 17565942. - Hans Havermann, Feb 02 2020

Examples

			The first triple is (459,495,954) and we have 459 + 495 = 954, anagrams of each other;
The second triple is (1089,8019,9108) and we have 1089 + 8019 = 9108, anagrams of each other;
The third triple is (1089,8091,9180) and we have 1089 + 8091 = 9180, anagrams of each other;
The fourth triple is (1269,1692,2961) and we have 1269 +1692 = 2961, anagrams of each other; etc.
		

Crossrefs

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