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.

A308827 Sum of the largest parts of the partitions of n into 5 parts.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 5, 9, 17, 27, 44, 64, 96, 134, 188, 251, 339, 439, 571, 724, 917, 1137, 1411, 1719, 2097, 2519, 3023, 3586, 4253, 4990, 5848, 6797, 7891, 9092, 10467, 11966, 13670, 15526, 17612, 19880, 22417, 25159, 28209, 31502, 35145, 39061, 43375
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Wesley Ivan Hurt, Jun 26 2019

Keywords

Examples

			The partitions of n into 5 parts for n = 10, 11, ..
                                                       1+1+1+1+10
                                                        1+1+1+2+9
                                                        1+1+1+3+8
                                                        1+1+1+4+7
                                                        1+1+1+5+6
                                            1+1+1+1+9   1+1+2+2+8
                                            1+1+1+2+8   1+1+2+3+7
                                            1+1+1+3+7   1+1+2+4+6
                                            1+1+1+4+6   1+1+2+5+5
                                            1+1+1+5+5   1+1+3+3+6
                                1+1+1+1+8   1+1+2+2+7   1+1+3+4+5
                                1+1+1+2+7   1+1+2+3+6   1+1+4+4+4
                                1+1+1+3+6   1+1+2+4+5   1+2+2+2+7
                    1+1+1+1+7   1+1+1+4+5   1+1+3+3+5   1+2+2+3+6
                    1+1+1+2+6   1+1+2+2+6   1+1+3+4+4   1+2+2+4+5
                    1+1+1+3+5   1+1+2+3+5   1+2+2+2+6   1+2+3+3+5
        1+1+1+1+6   1+1+1+4+4   1+1+2+4+4   1+2+2+3+5   1+2+3+4+4
        1+1+1+2+5   1+1+2+2+5   1+1+3+3+4   1+2+2+4+4   1+3+3+3+4
        1+1+1+3+4   1+1+2+3+4   1+2+2+2+5   1+2+3+3+4   2+2+2+2+6
        1+1+2+2+4   1+1+3+3+3   1+2+2+3+4   1+3+3+3+3   2+2+2+3+5
        1+1+2+3+3   1+2+2+2+4   1+2+3+3+3   2+2+2+2+5   2+2+2+4+4
        1+2+2+2+3   1+2+2+3+3   2+2+2+2+4   2+2+2+3+4   2+2+3+3+4
        2+2+2+2+2   2+2+2+2+3   2+2+2+3+3   2+2+3+3+3   2+3+3+3+3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
  n  |     10          11          12          13          14        ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
a(n) |     27          44          64          96         134        ...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
- _Wesley Ivan Hurt_, Sep 12 2019
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Sum[Sum[Sum[Sum[n - i - j - k - l, {i, j, Floor[(n - j - k - l)/2]}], {j, k, Floor[(n - k - l)/3]}], {k, l, Floor[(n - l)/4]}], {l, Floor[n/5]}], {n, 0, 100}]

Formula

a(n) = Sum_{l=1..floor(n/5)} Sum_{k=l..floor((n-l)/4)} Sum_{j=k..floor((n-k-l)/3)} Sum_{i=j..floor((n-j-k-l)/2)} (n-i-j-k-l).
a(n) = A308822(n) - A308823(n) - A308824(n) - A308825(n) - A308826(n).