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 A291278 #7 Aug 22 2017 12:09:42 %S A291278 2,5,13,17,29,37,41,61,73,97,101,113,137,149,157,173,181,197,229,241, %T A291278 257,277,313,317,349,353,389,409,421,433,449,457,461,509,541,569,577, %U A291278 593,613,641,653,661,673,709,757,761,769,797,809,829,853,857 %N A291278 Primes p such that p does not divide any term of the Apery-like sequence A006077. %H A291278 Amita Malik and Armin Straub, <a href="/A133370/a133370.nb">Mathematica notebook for generating A133370 and A260793, A291275-A291284</a> %H A291278 Amita Malik and Armin Straub, <a href="/A133370/a133370.pdf">Lists of all primes up to 10000 in A133370 and A260793, A291275-A291284, together with Mathematica code.</a> %H A291278 Amita Malik and Armin Straub, <a href="https://doi.org/10.1007/s40993-016-0036-8">Divisibility properties of sporadic Apéry-like numbers</a>, Research in Number Theory, 2016, 2:5 %Y A291278 For primes that do not divide the terms of the sequences A000172, A005258, A002893, A081085, A006077, A093388, A125143, A229111, A002895, A290575, A290576, A005259 see A260793, A291275-A291284 and A133370 respectively. %K A291278 nonn %O A291278 1,1 %A A291278 _N. J. A. Sloane_, Aug 21 2017