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 A363177 #10 May 19 2023 08:02:24 %S A363177 26376098024367,33912126031329,1910383099764867,2792098376579421, %T A363177 5229860083034911875,6886512413632368153,8815747507513708671, %U A363177 28966027524687899919,42200802302982406288,89594138836162749375,224439112362213402759,288564573037131517833,512767531125033485625 %N A363177 Primitive abundant numbers (A071395) that are cubefull numbers (A036966). %C A363177 It seems that this sequence is also the intersection of A036966 and A091191 (checked up to 10^27). %C A363177 Are there terms that are 4-full numbers (A036967)? There are none below 10^27. %H A363177 Amiram Eldar, <a href="/A363177/b363177.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..42</a> (terms below 10^27) %H A363177 Wikipedia, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitive_abundant_number">Primitive abundant number</a>. %Y A363177 Intersection of A036966 and A071395. %Y A363177 Subsequence of A363169 and A363175. %Y A363177 A306797 is a subsequence. %Y A363177 Cf. A036967, A091191. %K A363177 nonn %O A363177 1,1 %A A363177 _Amiram Eldar_, May 19 2023