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.

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A371469 Least pandigital number whose n-th power contains each digit (0-9) exactly n times.

Original entry on oeis.org

1023456789, 3175462089, 4680215379, 5702631489, 7351062489, 7025869314
Offset: 1

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Author

Zhining Yang, Apr 01 2024

Keywords

Comments

If an n-th power of a pandigital number k contains each digit (0-9) exactly n times, it implies that 10^(10 - 1/n) <= 9876543210, so n <= 185. It's easy to verify that no solutions exist for n=7 to 185.
For the largest pandigital number whose n-th power contains each digit (0-9) exactly n times, see A370667.

Examples

			a(4) = 5702631489 because it is the least 10-digit number that contains each digit (0-9) exactly once and its 4th power 1057550783692741389295697108242363408641 contains each digit (0-9) exactly 4 times.
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Mathematica
    s = FromDigits /@ Permutations[Range[0, 9]]; For[n = 1, n < 7, n++,
     For[k = 1, k <= Length@s, k++,
      If[Count[Tally[IntegerDigits[s[[k]]^n]][[All, 2]], n] == 10,
       Print[{n, s[[k]]}]; Break[]]]]
  • Python
    from itertools import permutations as per
    a=[]
    for n in range(1,7):
        for k in [int(''.join(d)) for d in per('0123456789', 10)]:
            if all(str(k**n).count(d) ==n for d in '0123456789'):
                a.append(k)
                break
    print(a)
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