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 1-6 of 6 results.

A060351 If the binary expansion of n has k bits, let S be the subset of [k-1] such that i is in S if the i-th bit of n is a 1 (with the first bit being the least significant bit); a(n) is the number of permutations of [k] with descent set S.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 1, 1, 3, 5, 3, 3, 5, 3, 1, 1, 4, 9, 6, 9, 16, 11, 4, 4, 11, 16, 9, 6, 9, 4, 1, 1, 5, 14, 10, 19, 35, 26, 10, 14, 40, 61, 35, 26, 40, 19, 5, 5, 19, 40, 26, 35, 61, 40, 14, 10, 26, 35, 19, 10, 14, 5, 1, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Mike Zabrocki, Mar 31 2001

Keywords

Comments

a(n) is the number of permutations in the symmetric group S_k such that n = 2^(k-1) + the sum of 2^(i-1), where i is a descent of the permutation and k = number of digits in the binary expansion of n.
If n=4m then a(n)-a(n+1)+a(n+2)-a(n+3) = 0. This follows from Theorem 10 of my paper arXiv:0801.0072v1. E.g., a(20)-a(21)+a(22)-a(23) = 9-16+11-4 = 0. - Vladimir Shevelev, Jan 07 2008
Denote by {n,k} the number of permutations of {0,1,...n} such that the binary expansion of k with n-1 digits (the expansion is allowed to begin with 0's) indicates a fixed distribution of "up"(1) and "down"(0) points. The numbers {n,k} are called "up-down coefficients" of permutations, since they have many similar properties to binomial coefficients C(n,k) (see Shevelev et al. references). The sequence lists the rows numbers {n,k} as a triangle read by rows (see example). - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 13 2014

Examples

			Interpreted as a triangle:
  1;
  1;
  1, 1;
  1, 2, 2, 1;
  1, 3, 5, 3, 3, 5, 3, 1;
  1, 4, 9, 6, 9, 16, 11, 4, 4, 11, 16, 9, 6, 9, 4, 1;
  1, 5, 14, 10, 19, 35, 26, 10, 14, 40, 61, 35, 26, 40, 19, 5, 5, 19, 40, 26, 35, 61, 40, 14, 10, 26, 35, 19, 10, 14, 5, 1;
  ...
From _Vladimir Shevelev_, Feb 13 2014: (Start)
Consider {4,2} (see comments). k=010 (4-1 binary digits).
So {4,2} is the number of down-up-down permutations of {1,2,3,4}. We have 5 such permutations (2,1,4,3),(3,1,4,2),(3,2,4,1),(4,1,3,2) and (4,2,3,1). Thus {4,2}=5.
Over rows, the sequence has the form:
  {0,0}
  {1,0}
  {2,0} {2,1}
  {3,0} {3,1} {3,2} {3,3}
  {4,0} {4,1} {4,2} {4,3} {4,4} {4,5} {4,6} {4,7}
  ...
such that the i-th row contains ceiling(2^(i-1)) entries with row sum i!, i>=0.
(End)
The binary expansion of n=11 is 1011, which has k=4 digits. Of the first k-1=3 bits, starting from the least significant bit on the right, the first and second are 1, so S={1,2}. The a(11)=3 permutations of [k]={1,2,3,4} with descent set S={1,2} are {3,2,1,4}, {4,2,1,3}, and {4,3,1,2}. - _Danny Rorabaugh_, Apr 02 2015
		

References

  • I. Niven, A combinatorial problem of finite sequences, Nieuw Arch. Wisk. (3) 16 (1968), 116-123.

Crossrefs

Row sums give A000142.
Row lengths give A011782(n).
T(n,n) gives A335308.

Programs

  • Maple
    ct := proc(k) option remember; local i,out,n; if k=0 then RETURN(1); fi; n := floor(evalf(log[2](k)))+1; if k=2^n or k=2^(n+1)-1 then RETURN(1); fi; out := 0; for i from 1 to n do if irem(iquo(k, 2^(i-1)), 2) = 1 and irem(iquo(2*k,2^(i-1)),2) =0 then out := out+(n-1)!/(i-1)!/(n-i)!* ct(floor(irem(k,2^(i-1))+2^(i-2)))*ct(iquo(k,2^i)); fi; od; out; end: seq(ct(i),i=0..64);
    # second Maple program:
    b:= proc(u, o, t) option remember; expand(`if`(u+o=0, 1,
          add(b(u-j, o+j-1, t+1)*x^floor(2^(t-1)), j=1..u)+
          add(b(u+j-1, o-j, t+1), j=1..o)))
        end:
    T:= n-> (p-> seq(coeff(p, x, i), i=0..degree(p)))(b(n, 0$2)):
    seq(T(n), n=0..7);  # Alois P. Heinz, Sep 08 2020
    # third Maple program:
    b:= proc(u, o, t) option remember; `if`(u+o=0, `if`(t=0, 1, 0),
         `if`(irem(t, 2)=0, add(b(u-j, o+j-1, iquo(t, 2)), j=1..u),
          add(b(u+j-1, o-j, iquo(t, 2)), j=1..o)))
        end:
    T:= (n, k)-> b(n, 0, 2*k):
    seq(seq(T(n, k), k=0..ceil(2^(n-1))-1), n=0..7);  # Alois P. Heinz, Sep 12 2020
  • Mathematica
    <Wouter Meeussen, Jan 30 2012 *)
    upDown[n_, k_] := upDown[n, k] = Module[{t, m}, t = Flatten[ Reverse[ Position[ Reverse[ IntegerDigits[k, 2]], 1]]]; m = Length[t]; (-1)^m + Sum[upDown[t[[j]], k - 2^(t[[j]]-1)]*Binomial[n, t[[j]]], {j, 1, m}]]; Table[upDown[n, k], {n, 1, 7}, {k, 0, 2^(n-1)-1}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Jul 16 2017, after Vladimir Shevelev *)
    P[n_, x_] := P[n, x] = (1/(1-x^2^(n-1)))(Product[1-x^2^k, {k, 0, (n-1)}] + Sum[Binomial[n, i] Product[1-x^2^k, {k, i, n-1}] x^2^(i-1) P[i, x], {i, 1, n-1}]) // Simplify; P[1, ] = 1; Table[CoefficientList[P[n, x], x], {n, 1, 7}] // Flatten (* _Jean-François Alcover, Sep 06 2018, after Vladimir Shevelev *)

Formula

{n+1,2*k} + {n+1,2*k+1} = (n+1)*{n,k},
{n+2,4*k} + {n+2,4*k+2} = {n+2, 4*k+1} + {n+2,4*k+1} + {n+2,4*k+3} = (n+2)*(n+1)/2 * {n,k}, etc.
Sum_{i=0..2^r-1} {n,i} = n*(n-1)*...*(n-r+1).
For n >= 1, 0 <= k < 2^(n-1), {n,k} <= {n,r_n}, where r_n=(2^n-2)/3, if n is odd, r_n=(2^n-1)/3, if n is even.
Equality holds iff k=r_n or 2^(n-1)-r_n-1, which corresponds the case of alternating permutations. De Bruijn mentioned that Niven knew the latter result, but he never published this statement. A proof can be found in the Shevelev and Spilker reference (Section 5).
Many other equalities, recursions and unequalities can be found in Shevelev and Shevelev-Spilker references. - Vladimir Shevelev, Feb 13 2014

Extensions

Definition corrected by Julian Gilbey, Jul 26 2007
T(0,0)=1 prepended by Alois P. Heinz, Sep 08 2020

A060350 The sum over all subsets S of [n] of the squares of the number of permutations with descent set = S.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 10, 88, 1216, 24176, 654424, 23136128, 1035227008, 57186502912, 3822411268864, 304059285928960, 28385946491599360, 3073391215118186496, 381995951933025287680, 54020316243835807039488, 8624091617045072628121600, 1543536018434416280510332928
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Mike Zabrocki, Mar 31 2001

Keywords

Comments

a(n) = number of ordered pairs of permutations of [n] such that the first has an ascent wherever the second has a descent and vice versa. For example, the pair of permutations (1243, 4123) does not qualify because they have a common ascent starting at location 2, and a(2) = 2 counts (12, 21), (21, 12). - David Callan, Sep 15 2013

Examples

			a(1)=1^2; a(2)=1^2+1^2; a(3)=1^2+2^2+2^2+1^2; a(4)=1^2+3^2+5^2+3^2+3^2+5^2+3^2+1^2.
		

Crossrefs

Row sums of A259465.
Column k=2 of A334622.

Programs

  • Maple
    ct := proc(k) option remember; local i,out,n; if k=0 then RETURN(1); fi; n := floor(evalf(log[2](k)))+1; if k=2^n or k=2^(n+1)-1 then RETURN(1); fi; out := 0; for i from 1 to n do if irem(iquo(k, 2^(i-1)), 2) = 1 and irem(iquo(2*k,2^(i-1)),2) =0 then out := out+(n-1)!/(i-1)!/(n-i)!* ct(floor(irem(k,2^(i-1))+2^(i-2)))*ct(iquo(k,2^i)); fi; od; out; end: seq(add(ct(i)^2,i=floor(2^(n-1))..2^n-1), n=0..15);
    # second Maple program:
    b:= proc(u, o, h) option remember; `if`(u+o=0, 1,
          add(add(b(u-j, o+j-1, h+i-1), i=1..u+o-h), j=1..u)+
          add(add(b(u+j-1, o-j, h-i), i=1..h), j=1..o))
        end:
    a:= n-> b(0, n$2):
    seq(a(n), n=0..20);  # Alois P. Heinz, Jul 02 2015
  • Mathematica
    b[u_, o_, h_] := b[u, o, h] = If[u + o == 0, 1, Sum[Sum[b[u - j, o + j - 1, h + i - 1], {i, 1, u + o - h}], {j, 1, u}] + Sum[Sum[b[u + j - 1, o - j, h - i], {i, 1, h}], {j, 1, o}]]; a[n_] := b[0, n, n]; Table[a[n], {n, 0, 20}] (* Jean-François Alcover, Nov 11 2015, after Alois P. Heinz *)

Formula

a(n) = A137782(2n) / A000984(n).
a(n) = Sum_{j=0..ceiling(2^(n-1))-1} A060351(n,j)^2. - Alois P. Heinz, Sep 15 2020
a(n) ~ c * d^n * n!^2, where d = 0.552406011965766199179395470003589240257321... and c = 1.6412834540969426814342654061364... - Vaclav Kotesovec, Sep 18 2020

Extensions

Two more terms from Max Alekseyev, May 06 2009
a(0) prepended, a(18) from Alois P. Heinz, Jul 02 2015

A291903 Sums of the fourth powers of the descent set statistics for permutations on n elements.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 34, 1576, 190216, 46479536, 21246061600, 16505196258944, 20569621110703360, 39048520577674054912, 108556407221350072075840, 427386074980323385950161920, 2317659324414032887611600999424, 16904848426143946143993568391307264, 162490636486997482412425606460112242944, 2021898321663894965658036079204603050491904
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Richard Ehrenborg, Sep 05 2017

Keywords

Examples

			For n=4, we have a(4) = 1^4 + 3^4 + 5^4 + 3^4 + 3^4 + 5^4 + 3^4 + 1^4 = 1576.
		

Crossrefs

Column k=4 of A334622.

Formula

a(n) = Sum_{j=0..ceiling(2^(n-1))-1} A060351(n,j)^4. - Alois P. Heinz, Sep 15 2020

Extensions

a(0)=1 prepended by Alois P. Heinz, Sep 09 2020

A334623 Sum of the n-th powers of the descent set statistics for permutations of [n].

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 18, 1576, 2675100, 128235838496, 265039489112493900, 31306198216486969509375104, 278983981168082455883720325976751040, 235157286166918393786165504356030195355598048512, 23075317400822150539572583950910707053701314350537805923757600
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Alois P. Heinz, Sep 09 2020

Keywords

Crossrefs

Main diagonal of A334622.

Programs

  • Maple
    b:= proc(u, o, t) option remember; expand(`if`(u+o=0, 1,
          add(b(u-j, o+j-1, t+1)*x^floor(2^(t-1)), j=1..u)+
          add(b(u+j-1, o-j, t+1), j=1..o)))
        end:
    a:= n-> (p-> add(coeff(p, x, i)^n, i=0..degree(p)))(b(n, 0$2)):
    seq(a(n), n=0..12);
  • Mathematica
    b[u_, o_, t_] := b[u, o, t] = Expand[If[u + o == 0, 1,
        Sum[b[u - j, o + j - 1, t + 1]*x^Floor[2^(t - 1)], {j, 1, u}] +
        Sum[b[u + j - 1, o - j, t + 1], {j, 1, o}]]];
    a[n_] := Function[p, Sum[Coefficient[p, x, i]^n, {i, 0, Exponent[p, x]}]][ b[n, 0, 0]];
    a /@ Range[0, 12] (* Jean-François Alcover, Dec 20 2020, after Alois P. Heinz *)

Formula

a(n) = A334622(n,n).
a(n) = Sum_{j=0..ceiling(2^(n-1))-1} A060351(n,j)^n.

A335545 A(n,k) is the sum of the k-th powers of the (positive) number of permutations of [n] with j descents (j=0..max(0,n-1)); square array A(n,k), n>=0, k>=0, read by antidiagonals.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 3, 1, 1, 2, 6, 4, 1, 1, 2, 18, 24, 5, 1, 1, 2, 66, 244, 120, 6, 1, 1, 2, 258, 2664, 5710, 720, 7, 1, 1, 2, 1026, 29284, 322650, 188908, 5040, 8, 1, 1, 2, 4098, 322104, 19888690, 55457604, 8702820, 40320, 9, 1, 1, 2, 16386, 3543124, 1276095330, 16657451236, 17484605040, 524888040, 362880, 10
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Alois P. Heinz, Sep 12 2020

Keywords

Examples

			Square array A(n,k) begins:
  1,   1,      1,        1,           1,             1, ...
  1,   1,      1,        1,           1,             1, ...
  2,   2,      2,        2,           2,             2, ...
  3,   6,     18,       66,         258,          1026, ...
  4,  24,    244,     2664,       29284,        322104, ...
  5, 120,   5710,   322650,    19888690,    1276095330, ...
  6, 720, 188908, 55457604, 16657451236, 5025377832180, ...
  ...
		

Crossrefs

Columns k=0-2 give: A028310, A000142, A168562.
Rows n=0+1, 2-3 give: A000012, A007395(k+1), A178789(k+1).
Main diagonal gives A335546.

Programs

  • Maple
    b:= proc(u, o, t) option remember; `if`(u+o=0, 1,
          expand(add(b(u-j, o+j-1, 1)*x^t, j=1..u))+
                 add(b(u+j-1, o-j, 1), j=1..o))
        end:
    A:= (n, k)-> (p-> add(coeff(p, x, i)^k, i=0..degree(p)))(b(n, 0$2)):
    seq(seq(A(n, d-n), n=0..d), d=0..10);
    # second Maple program:
    A:= (n, k)-> add(combinat[eulerian1](n, j)^k, j=0..max(0, n-1)):
    seq(seq(A(n, d-n), n=0..d), d=0..10);
  • Mathematica
    B[n_, k_] := B[n, k] = Sum[(-1)^j*Binomial[n+1, j]*(k-j+1)^n, {j, 0, k+1}];
    A[0, ] = 1; A[n, k_] := Sum[B[n, j]^k, {j, 0, n-1}];
    Table[A[n, d-n], {d, 0, 10}, {n, 0, d}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Feb 11 2021 *)

Formula

A(n,k) = Sum_{j=0..max(0,n-1)} A173018(n,j)^k.

A291902 Sums of the cubes of the descent set statistics for permutations on n elements.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 18, 360, 14460, 994680, 109021500, 17815754880, 4147063256448, 1323985303267200, 562636176102554400, 310405397451855552000, 217731000904433587359360, 190749857434239995742090240, 205540893695782384696324368000, 268793206446238988670401236992000
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Richard Ehrenborg, Sep 05 2017

Keywords

Examples

			For n=4, we have a(4) = 1^3 + 3^3 + 5^5 + 3^3 + 3^3 + 5^3 + 3^3 + 1^3 = 360.
		

Crossrefs

Column k=3 of A334622.

Formula

a(n) = Sum_{j=0..ceiling(2^(n-1))-1} A060351(n,j)^3. - Alois P. Heinz, Sep 15 2020

Extensions

a(0)=1 prepended by Alois P. Heinz, Sep 09 2020
Showing 1-6 of 6 results.