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 A318787 #24 Apr 25 2020 03:18:47 %S A318787 293339,318743,327661,344479,345533,355559,367789,382813,386549, %T A318787 393373,395491,395537,395677,398129,404321,405989,406649,407807, %U A318787 409901,410413,421469,425813,426161,426487,429971,430259,430847,432337,432983,434563,435839,438499,439991,440311,441613,443089 %N A318787 Primes that divide exactly one pandigital number (A050278 - each digit 0-9 appears exactly once, no leading zero). %C A318787 The corresponding pandigital numbers are in A318788. %C A318787 The last term is a(834218) = 1097393447, which divides 9876541023. - _Giovanni Resta_, Sep 04 2018 %H A318787 Jud McCranie, <a href="/A318787/b318787.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..1000</a> %H A318787 Carlos Rivera, <a href="http://www.primepuzzles.net/puzzles/puzz_926.htm">Puzzle 926. pandigital and prime numbers</a>, The Prime Puzzles and Problems Connection. %e A318787 293339 is prime and 1795234680 is the only pandigitial number that it divides. %Y A318787 Cf. A050278, A318788. %K A318787 nonn,base,fini %O A318787 1,1 %A A318787 _Jud McCranie_, Sep 03 2018