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 A275672 #13 Aug 27 2016 04:52:26 %S A275672 0,1,3,4,6,7,9 %N A275672 Size of a largest subset of a regular cubic lattice of n*n*n points without repeated distances. %C A275672 10 <= a(7) <= 12, 11 <= a(8) <= 13, 12 <= a(9) <= 15, 13 <= a(10) <= 17. %H A275672 Math.StackExchange, <a href="http://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1879760">A largest subset of a cubic lattice with unique distances between its points</a>, Aug 03 2016. %H A275672 Ed Pegg Jr, <a href="http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/NoRepeatedDistances/">No Repeated Distances</a>, Wolfram Demonstrations Project, May 03 2013. %H A275672 A. Zimmermann. <a href="http://www.azspcs.net/Contest/PointPacking/FinalReport">Al Zimmermann's Programming Contests: Point Packing</a>, Oct 10 2009. %e A275672 For n = 5, a(5) >= 7 is witnessed by {(1,1,1), (1,1,2), (1,1,4), (1,2,5), (2,3,1), (4,4,5), (5,5,4)}. There are 4223 distinct (up to rotation and reflection) 7-point configurations without repeated distances, and none of them can be extended to 8 points, so a(5) = 7. %Y A275672 Cf. A003022, A054578, A036501, A169942. %K A275672 nonn,hard,more %O A275672 0,3 %A A275672 _Vladimir Reshetnikov_, Aug 04 2016