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.

A213184 Numbers which may represent a date in "condensed American notation" MMDDYY.

Original entry on oeis.org

10100, 10101, 10102, 10103, 10104, 10105, 10106, 10107, 10108, 10109, 10110, 10111, 10112, 10113, 10114, 10115, 10116, 10117, 10118, 10119, 10120, 10121, 10122, 10123, 10124, 10125, 10126, 10127, 10128, 10129, 10130, 10131, 10132, 10133, 10134, 10135, 10136, 10137, 10138, 10139, 10140
Offset: 1

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Author

M. F. Hasler, Feb 28 2013

Keywords

Comments

The "may" in the definition should clarify that, e.g., 22900 is in the sequence since it may represent a date (Feb. 29), but not necessarily in any century (e.g., in 2000 but not in 1900), but 22900+k is present only for k=0 (mod 4).
The sequence is finite, with 366*25 + 365*75 terms, cf. comment from G. Resta in A213182. The largest term is a(36525)=123199.

Examples

			a(1)=10100 represents, e.g., Jan 01 1900 (or Jan 01 2000).
a(100)=10199 (for Jan 01 1999) is followed by a(101)=10200 (for Jan 02 2000).
a(3100)=13199 (for Jan 31 1999) is followed by a(3101)=20100 (for Feb 01 2000).
		

Crossrefs