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 A255312 #14 Sep 03 2021 14:07:15 %S A255312 1,2,3,4,26,27,35,36,37,47,153,206,254,255,267,326,334,543,544,550, %T A255312 573,590,604,719,720,965,1327,1340,1353,1354,1414,1423,1453,1474,1579, %U A255312 1589,1598,1762,1856,2105,2840,2921,2922,2928 %N A255312 Positive integers m for which the m-th row of A088643 in reverse agrees with the first m terms of A132075. %C A255312 I do not know if this sequence is infinite. Given any term it is easy to compute all earlier terms. The largest number I know of in the sequence is 21977. %H A255312 Peter Munn, <a href="/A255312/a255312_1.txt">Illustration of the relationship between A088643, A132075 and this sequence</a>. %Y A255312 Cf. A088643, A132075. %K A255312 nonn %O A255312 1,2 %A A255312 _Paul Boddington_, Feb 20 2015