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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.

A246083 Paradigm shift sequence for (0,5) production scheme with replacement.

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%I A246083 #11 Nov 18 2016 20:08:06
%S A246083 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,22,24,26,28,30,33,
%T A246083 36,39,42,45,48,51,54,57,60,66,72,78,84,90,99,108,117,126,135,144,153,
%U A246083 162,171,180,198,216,234,252,270,297,324,351,378,405,432,459,486,513,540,594,648,702,756,810,891,972,1053,1134,1215,1296,1377,1458
%N A246083 Paradigm shift sequence for (0,5) production scheme with replacement.
%C A246083 This sequence is the solution to the following problem: "Suppose you have the choice of using one of three production options: apply a simple incremental action, bundle existing output as an integrated product (which requires p=0 steps), or implement the current bundled action (which requires q=5 steps). The first use of a novel bundle erases (or makes obsolete) all prior actions. How large an output can be generated in n time steps?"
%C A246083 1. A production scheme with replacement R(p,q) eliminates existing output following a bundling action, while an additive scheme A(p,q) retains the output. The schemes correspond according to A(p,q)=R(p-q,q), with the replacement scheme serving as the default presentation.
%C A246083 2. This problem is structurally similar to the Copy and Paste Keyboard problem: Existing sequences (A178715 and A193286) should be regarded as Paradigm-Shift Sequences with production schemes R(1,1) and R(2,1) with replacement, respectively.
%C A246083 3. The ideal number of implementations per bundle, as measured by the geometric growth rate (p+zq root of z), is z = 3.
%C A246083 4. All solutions will be of the form a(n) = (qm+r) * m^b * (m+1)^d.
%C A246083 5. For large n, the sequence is recursively defined.
%H A246083 Colin Barker, <a href="/A246083/b246083.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..1000</a>
%H A246083 <a href="/index/Rec#order_15">Index entries for linear recurrences with constant coefficients</a>, signature (0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,3).
%F A246083 a(n) = (qd+r) * d^(C-R) * (d+1)^R, where r = (n-Cp) mod q, Q = floor( (R-Cp)/q ), R = Q mod (C+1), and d = floor (Q/(C+1) ).
%F A246083 a(n) = 3*a(n-15) for all n >= 25.
%F A246083 G.f.: x*(1 +x +x^2 +x^3 +x^4)^2 * (1 +2*x^5 +3*x^10 +x^15) / (1 -3*x^15). - _Colin Barker_, Nov 18 2016
%o A246083 (PARI) Vec(x*(1 +x +x^2 +x^3 +x^4)^2 * (1 +2*x^5 +3*x^10 +x^15) / (1 -3*x^15) + O(x^100)) \\ _Colin Barker_, Nov 18 2016
%Y A246083 Paradigm shift sequences for q=5: A103969, A246074, A246075, A246076, A246079, A246083, A246087, A246091, A246095, A246099, A246103.
%Y A246083 Paradigm shift sequences for p=0: A000792, A246080, A246081, A246082, A246083.
%K A246083 nonn,easy
%O A246083 1,2
%A A246083 _Jonathan T. Rowell_, Aug 13 2014