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.

A257884 Sequence (a(n)) generated by Algorithm (in Comments) with a(1) = 0 and d(1) = 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 2, 1, 4, 8, 3, 9, 5, 10, 7, 14, 6, 15, 13, 21, 11, 22, 16, 26, 12, 24, 17, 30, 18, 32, 19, 34, 23, 39, 20, 37, 28, 46, 25, 44, 27, 47, 29, 50, 35, 57, 31, 54, 38, 62, 33, 58, 36, 63, 40, 66, 41, 69, 42, 71, 43, 73, 49, 80, 45, 77, 110, 48, 82, 51, 86, 52
Offset: 1

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Author

Clark Kimberling, May 13 2015

Keywords

Comments

Algorithm: For k >= 1, let A(k) = {a(1), …, a(k)} and D(k) = {d(1), …, d(k)}. Begin with k = 1 and nonnegative integers a(1) and d(1). Let h be the least integer > -a(k) such that h is not in D(k) and a(k) + h is not in A(k). Let a(k+1) = a(k) + h and d(k+1) = h. Replace k by k+1 and repeat inductively.
Conjecture: if a(1) is an nonnegative integer and d(1) is an integer, then (a(n)) is a permutation of the nonnegative integers (if a(1) = 0) or a permutation of the positive integers (if a(1) > 0). Moreover, (d(n)) is a permutation of the integers if d(1) = 0, or of the nonzero integers if d(1) > 0.
See A257883 for a guide to related sequences.

Examples

			a(1) = 0, d(1) = 1;
a(2) = 2, d(2) = 2;
a(3) = 1, d(3) = -1;
a(4) = 4, d(4) = 3.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    a[1] = 0; d[1] = 1; k = 1; z = 10000; zz = 120;
    A[k_] := Table[a[i], {i, 1, k}]; diff[k_] := Table[d[i], {i, 1, k}];
    c[k_] := Complement[Range[-z, z], diff[k]];
    T[k_] := -a[k] + Complement[Range[z], A[k]]
    Table[{h = Min[Intersection[c[k], T[k]]], a[k + 1] = a[k] + h,
       d[k + 1] = h, k = k + 1}, {i, 1, zz}];
    u = Table[a[k], {k, 1, zz}]  (* A257884 *)
    Table[d[k], {k, 1, zz}]      (* A175499 *)

Formula

a(k+1) - a(k) = d(k+1) for k >= 1.