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 A325421 #44 Sep 10 2019 21:47:22 %S A325421 169,289,507,841,867,1183,1369,1521,1681,1859,2023,2523,2601,2809, %T A325421 3179,3211,3549,3721,3887,4107,4563,5043,5239,5329,5491,5577,5887, %U A325421 6069,6647,7267,7569,7803,7921,7943,8281,8427,8959,9251,9409,9537,9583,9633,9971 %N A325421 Numbers k coprime to 10 such that there are exactly two values of A for which k^2+4*A and k^2-4*A are perfect squares. %C A325421 These are the odd integers k, not a multiple of 5, such that k^2 is an arithmetic mean of two other odd perfect squares in exactly two ways. %e A325421 169 is a term since 169^2±4*(5070) and 169^2±4*(7140) are all perfect squares. %o A325421 (PARI) ok(k)={if(k%2==0||k%5==0, 0, my(k2=k^2, L=List()); forstep(i=1, k-1, 2, my(d=k2-i^2); if(issquare(k2+d), listput(L,i))); #L==2)} %o A325421 for(k=1, 10000, if(ok(k), print1(k, ", "))) \\ _Andrew Howroyd_, Sep 06 2019 %Y A325421 Cf. A002144, A309812. %K A325421 nonn %O A325421 1,1 %A A325421 _Mohsin A. Shaikh_, Sep 06 2019 %E A325421 a(28)-a(43) from _Andrew Howroyd_, Sep 06 2019