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.

Showing 1-5 of 5 results.

A317918 Numbers missing from A317916.

Original entry on oeis.org

5329, 5398, 5399, 5402, 5403, 5405, 5407, 5429, 5613, 5622, 5626, 5667, 5679, 5698, 5702, 5704, 5705, 5764, 5840, 5850, 5882, 5922, 5924, 5927, 5930, 5937, 5940, 5943, 5975, 5985, 5992, 5995, 5996, 5999, 6000, 6001, 6003, 6004, 6005
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Daniël Karssen, Aug 11 2018

Keywords

Comments

A317916 is finite, so this sequence is infinite.
See A317916 for further information.

Crossrefs

Cf. A317916.

A323749 Triangle read by rows: T(n,m) (1 <= n < m) = number of moves of a (m,n)-leaper (a generalization of a chess knight) until it can no longer move, starting on a board with squares spirally numbered from 1. Each move is to the lowest-numbered unvisited square. T(n,m) = -1 if the path never terminates.

Original entry on oeis.org

2016, 3723, 4634, 13103, 2016, 1888, 14570, 7574, 1323, 4286, 26967, 3723, 2016, 4634, 1796, 101250, 12217, 4683, 9386, 1811, 3487, 158735, 13103, 5974, 2016, 2758, 1888, 3984, 132688, 33864, 3723, 8900, 6513, 4634, 4505, 7796, 220439, 14570, 36232, 7574, 2016, 1323, 9052, 4286, 5679, 144841, 52738, 19370, 6355, 6425
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Jud McCranie, Jan 26 2019

Keywords

Comments

The entries are the lower triangle of an array, for an (m,n)-leaper, where 1 <= n < m, ordered: (2,1), (3,1), (3,2), (4,1), (4,2), etc. Are all the paths finite? This appears to be an open question.

Examples

			A chess knight (a (2,1)-leaper) makes 2016 moves before it has no moves available (see A316667). Initial placement on square 1 counts as one move.
		

Crossrefs

Extensions

Edited by N. J. A. Sloane, Apr 30 2021

A323750 The label of the ending square of a (m,n)-leaper (a generalization of a chess knight) when it can no longer move, starting on a board with squares spirally numbered, starting at 1. Each move is to the lowest-numbered unvisited square.

Original entry on oeis.org

2084, 7081, 4698, 10847, 8399, 1164, 25963, 6760, 2269, 6500, 22421, 28273, 18946, 18643, 1202, 202891, 10059, 6425, 6662, 3039, 1383, 142679, 43325, 3744, 33725, 1460, 4639, 1952, 252953, 23684, 63577, 6040, 10841, 41836, 10017, 6338, 188501, 104413, 26546, 26967, 52736, 9145, 6580, 25799, 1869, 257479, 35652
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Jud McCranie, Jan 26 2019

Keywords

Comments

The entries are the lower triangle of an array, for (m,n)-leaper, where 1 <= n < m, ordered: (2,1), (3,1), (3,2), (4,1), (4,2), etc.

Examples

			A chess knight (a (2,1)-leaper) makes 2016 moves before it reaches the square labeled 2084 and has no moves available (see A316667).
		

Crossrefs

A317915 Squares visited by a (2,5)-leaper on a spirally numbered board and moving to the lowest available unvisited square at each step, squares labelled >=0.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 83, 30, 17, 26, 43, 14, 47, 40, 11, 36, 21, 32, 25, 18, 29, 46, 15, 42, 9, 38, 31, 22, 35, 28, 19, 48, 13, 44, 37, 10, 41, 34, 23, 68, 97, 186, 87, 60, 103, 192, 93, 52, 117, 172, 285, 162, 81, 176, 133, 248, 143, 202, 109, 344, 215, 70, 1, 66, 59, 6, 49, 12, 39
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Daniël Karssen, Aug 11 2018

Keywords

Comments

Board is numbered with the square spiral:
16--15--14--13--12
| |
17 4---3---2 11 .
| | | |
18 5 0---1 10 .
| | |
19 6---7---8---9 .
|
20--21--22--23--24--25
The sequence is finite: at step 7573, square 6759 is visited, after which there are no unvisited squares within one move.

Crossrefs

Formula

a(n) = A317916(n+1) - 1.

A306197 The label of the largest square that an (m,n)-leaper (a generalization of a chess knight) reaches before it can no longer move, starting on a board with squares spirally numbered, starting at 1. Each move is to the lowest-numbered unvisited square.

Original entry on oeis.org

3199, 9173, 7416, 16270, 12669, 4238, 36667, 10947, 4851, 15027, 34407, 36777, 28411, 29623, 5832, 237635, 17075, 14329, 17064, 8669, 9152, 191876, 65307, 10536, 50425, 7243, 17187, 9730, 307545, 45627, 82813, 16948, 24847, 66622, 23741, 24678, 259181, 147061, 48250, 43525, 78711, 19501, 18600, 59821, 15410, 334131
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Jud McCranie, Jan 28 2019

Keywords

Comments

The entries are the lower triangle of an array, for (m,n)-leaper, where 1 <= n < m, ordered: (2,1), (3,1), (3,2), (4,1), (4,2), etc. Are all terms finite?

Examples

			A chess knight (a (2,1)-leaper) reaches the square labeled 3199 before it reaches the square labeled 2084 and has no moves available (see A316667).
		

Crossrefs

Showing 1-5 of 5 results.