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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A365314 Number of unordered pairs of distinct positive integers <= n that can be linearly combined using nonnegative coefficients to obtain n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 3, 6, 8, 14, 14, 23, 24, 33, 28, 52, 36, 55, 58, 73, 53, 95, 62, 110, 94, 105, 81, 165, 105, 133, 132, 176, 112, 225, 123, 210, 174, 192, 186, 306, 157, 223, 218, 328, 180, 354, 192, 324, 315, 288, 216, 474, 260, 383, 311, 404, 254, 491, 338, 511, 360
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Sep 05 2023

Keywords

Comments

Is there only one case of nonzero adjacent equal parts, at position n = 6?

Examples

			We have 19 = 4*3 + 1*7, so the pair (3,7) is counted under a(19).
The a(2) = 1 through a(7) = 14 pairs:
  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)
         (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)
         (2,3)  (1,4)  (1,4)  (1,4)  (1,4)
                (2,3)  (1,5)  (1,5)  (1,5)
                (2,4)  (2,3)  (1,6)  (1,6)
                (3,4)  (2,5)  (2,3)  (1,7)
                       (3,5)  (2,4)  (2,3)
                       (4,5)  (2,5)  (2,5)
                              (2,6)  (2,7)
                              (3,4)  (3,4)
                              (3,5)  (3,7)
                              (3,6)  (4,7)
                              (4,6)  (5,7)
                              (5,6)  (6,7)
		

Crossrefs

The unrestricted version is A000217, ranks A001358.
For all subsets instead of just pairs we have A365073, complement A365380.
For strict partitions we have A365311, complement A365312.
The case of positive coefficients is A365315, for all subsets A088314.
The binary complement is A365320, positive A365321.
For partitions we have A365379, complement A365378.
A004526 counts partitions of length 2, shift right for strict.
A007865 counts sum-free subsets, complement A093971.
A179822 and A326080 count sum-closed subsets.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions.
A364914/A365046 count combination-full subsets, complement A326083/A124506.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    combs[n_,y_]:=With[{s=Table[{k,i},{k,y},{i,0,Floor[n/k]}]},Select[Tuples[s],Total[Times@@@#]==n&]];
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n],{2}], combs[n,#]!={}&]],{n,0,30}]
  • Python
    from itertools import count
    from sympy import divisors
    def A365314(n):
        a = set()
        for i in range(1,n+1):
            if not n%i:
                a.update(tuple(sorted((i,j))) for j in range(1,n+1) if j!=i)
            else:
                for j in count(0,i):
                    if j > n:
                        break
                    k = n-j
                    for d in divisors(k):
                        if d>=i:
                            break
                        a.add((d,i))
        return len(a) # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 12 2023

A117855 Number of nonzero palindromes of length n (in base 3).

Original entry on oeis.org

2, 2, 6, 6, 18, 18, 54, 54, 162, 162, 486, 486, 1458, 1458, 4374, 4374, 13122, 13122, 39366, 39366, 118098, 118098, 354294, 354294, 1062882, 1062882, 3188646, 3188646, 9565938, 9565938, 28697814, 28697814, 86093442, 86093442, 258280326, 258280326, 774840978
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Martin Renner, May 02 2006

Keywords

Comments

See A225367 for the sequence that counts all base 3 palindromes, including 0 (and thus also the number of n-digit terms in A006072). -- A nonzero palindrome of length L=2k-1 or of length L=2k is determined by the first k digits, which then determine the last k digits by symmetry. Since the first digit cannot be 0, there are 2*3^(k-1) possibilities. - M. F. Hasler, May 05 2013
From Gus Wiseman, Oct 18 2023: (Start)
Also the number of subsets of {1..n} with n not the sum of two subset elements (possibly the same). For example, the a(0) = 1 through a(4) = 6 subsets are:
{} {} {} {} {}
{1} {2} {1} {1}
{2} {3}
{3} {4}
{1,3} {1,4}
{2,3} {3,4}
For subsets with no subset summing to n we have A365377.
Requiring pairs to be distinct gives A068911, complement A365544.
The complement is counted by A366131.
(End) [Edited by Peter Munn, Nov 22 2023]

Examples

			The a(3)=6 palindromes of length 3 are: 101, 111, 121, 202, 212, and 222. - _M. F. Hasler_, May 05 2013
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A050683 and A070252.
Bisections are both A025192.
A093971/A088809/A364534 count certain types of sum-full subsets.
A108411 lists powers of 3 repeated, complement A167936.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    With[{c=NestList[3#&,2,20]},Riffle[c,c]] (* Harvey P. Dale, Mar 25 2018 *)
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n]],!MemberQ[Total/@Tuples[#,2],n]&]],{n,0,10}] (* Gus Wiseman, Oct 18 2023 *)
  • PARI
    A117855(n)=2*3^((n-1)\2) \\ - M. F. Hasler, May 05 2013
    
  • Python
    def A117855(n): return 3**(n-1>>1)<<1 # Chai Wah Wu, Oct 28 2024

Formula

a(n) = 2*3^floor((n-1)/2).
a(n) = 2*A108411(n-1).
From Colin Barker, Feb 15 2013: (Start)
a(n) = 3*a(n-2).
G.f.: -2*x*(x+1)/(3*x^2-1). (End)

Extensions

More terms from Colin Barker, Feb 15 2013

A365321 Number of pairs of distinct positive integers <= n that cannot be linearly combined with positive coefficients to obtain n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, 10, 13, 18, 24, 30, 37, 46, 54, 63, 77, 85, 99, 111, 127, 141, 161, 171, 194, 210, 235, 246, 277, 293, 322, 342, 372, 389, 428, 441, 491, 504, 545, 561, 612, 635, 680, 701, 753, 773, 836, 846, 911, 932, 1000, 1017, 1082, 1103, 1176, 1193
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Sep 06 2023

Keywords

Comments

We consider (for example) that 2x + y + 3z is a positive linear combination of (x,y,z), but 2x + y is not, as the coefficient of z is 0.

Examples

			For the pair p = (2,3) we have 4 = 2*2 + 0*3, so p is not counted under A365320(4), but it is not possible to write 4 as a positive linear combination of 2 and 3, so p is counted under a(4).
The a(2) = 1 through a(7) = 13 pairs:
  (1,2)  (1,3)  (1,4)  (1,5)  (1,6)  (1,7)
         (2,3)  (2,3)  (2,4)  (2,3)  (2,4)
                (2,4)  (2,5)  (2,5)  (2,6)
                (3,4)  (3,4)  (2,6)  (2,7)
                       (3,5)  (3,4)  (3,5)
                       (4,5)  (3,5)  (3,6)
                              (3,6)  (3,7)
                              (4,5)  (4,5)
                              (4,6)  (4,6)
                              (5,6)  (4,7)
                                     (5,6)
                                     (5,7)
                                     (6,7)
		

Crossrefs

The unrestricted version is A000217, ranks A001358.
For strict partitions we have A088528, complement A088314.
The (binary) complement is A365315, nonnegative A365314.
For nonnegative coefficients we have A365320, for subsets A365380.
For all subsets instead of just pairs we have A365322, complement A088314.
A004526 counts partitions of length 2, shift right for strict.
A007865 counts sum-free subsets, complement A093971.
A179822 and A326080 count sum-closed subsets.
A326083 and A124506 count combination-free subsets.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions.
A364914 and A365046 count combination-full subsets.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    combp[n_,y_]:=With[{s=Table[{k,i},{k,y},{i,1,Floor[n/k]}]},Select[Tuples[s],Total[Times@@@#]==n&]];
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n],{2}], combp[n,#]=={}&]],{n,0,30}]
  • Python
    from itertools import count
    from sympy import divisors
    def A365321(n):
        a = set()
        for i in range(1,n+1):
            for j in count(i,i):
                if j >= n:
                    break
                for d in divisors(n-j):
                    if d>=i:
                        break
                    a.add((d,i))
        return (n*(n-1)>>1)-len(a) # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 12 2023

A365044 Number of subsets of {1..n} whose greatest element cannot be written as a (strictly) positive linear combination of the others.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 3, 5, 9, 20, 43, 96, 207, 442, 925, 1913, 3911, 7947, 16061, 32350, 64995, 130384, 261271, 523194, 1047208, 2095459, 4192212, 8386044, 16774078, 33550622, 67104244, 134212163, 268428760, 536862900, 1073732255, 2147472267, 4294953778, 8589918612, 17179850312
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 26 2023

Keywords

Comments

Sets of this type may be called "positive combination-free".
Also subsets of {1..n} such that no element can be written as a (strictly) positive linear combination of the others.

Examples

			The subset S = {3,5,6,8} has 6 = 2*3 + 0*5 + 0*8 and 8 = 1*3 + 1*5 + 0*6 but neither of these is strictly positive, so S is counted under a(8).
The a(0) = 1 through a(5) = 20 subsets:
  {}  {}   {}   {}     {}         {}
      {1}  {1}  {1}    {1}        {1}
           {2}  {2}    {2}        {2}
                {3}    {3}        {3}
                {2,3}  {4}        {4}
                       {2,3}      {5}
                       {3,4}      {2,3}
                       {2,3,4}    {2,5}
                       {1,2,3,4}  {3,4}
                                  {3,5}
                                  {4,5}
                                  {2,3,4}
                                  {2,4,5}
                                  {3,4,5}
                                  {1,2,3,4}
                                  {1,2,3,5}
                                  {1,2,4,5}
                                  {1,3,4,5}
                                  {2,3,4,5}
                                  {1,2,3,4,5}
		

Crossrefs

The binary version is A007865, first differences A288728.
The binary complement is A093971, first differences A365070.
Without re-usable parts we have A151897, first differences A365071.
The nonnegative version is A326083, first differences A124506.
A subclass is A341507.
The nonnegative complement is A364914, first differences A365046.
The complement is counted by A365043, first differences A365042.
First differences are A365045.
A085489 and A364755 count subsets w/o the sum of two distinct elements.
A088809 and A364756 count subsets with the sum of two distinct elements.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions, complement A364839.
A364913 counts combination-full partitions.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    combp[n_,y_]:=With[{s=Table[{k,i},{k,y},{i,1,Floor[n/k]}]},Select[Tuples[s],Total[Times@@@#]==n&]];
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n]],And@@Table[combp[Last[#],Union[Most[#]]]=={},{k,Length[#]}]&]],{n,0,10}]
  • Python
    from itertools import combinations
    from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
    def A365044(n):
        mlist = tuple({tuple(sorted(p.keys())) for p in partitions(m,k=m-1)} for m in range(1,n+1))
        return n+1+sum(1 for k in range(2,n+1) for w in combinations(range(1,n+1),k) if w[:-1] not in mlist[w[-1]-1]) # Chai Wah Wu, Nov 20 2023

Formula

a(n) = 2^n - A365043(n).

Extensions

a(15)-a(34) from Chai Wah Wu, Nov 20 2023

A365315 Number of unordered pairs of distinct positive integers <= n that can be linearly combined using positive coefficients to obtain n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 12, 15, 18, 20, 24, 28, 28, 35, 37, 42, 44, 49, 49, 60, 59, 66, 65, 79, 74, 85, 84, 93, 93, 107, 100, 120, 104, 126, 121, 142, 129, 145, 140, 160, 150, 173, 154, 189, 170, 196, 176, 208, 193, 223, 202, 238, 203, 241, 227, 267, 235
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Sep 06 2023

Keywords

Comments

We consider (for example) that 2x + y + 3z is a positive linear combination of (x,y,z), but 2x + y is not, as the coefficient of z is 0.

Examples

			We have 19 = 4*3 + 1*7, so the pair (3,7) is counted under a(19).
For the pair p = (2,3), we have 4 = 2*2 + 0*3, so p is counted under A365314(4), but it is not possible to write 4 as a positive linear combination of 2 and 3, so p is not counted under a(4).
The a(3) = 1 through a(10) = 15 pairs:
  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)  (1,2)
         (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)  (1,3)
                (1,4)  (1,4)  (1,4)  (1,4)  (1,4)  (1,4)
                (2,3)  (1,5)  (1,5)  (1,5)  (1,5)  (1,5)
                       (2,4)  (1,6)  (1,6)  (1,6)  (1,6)
                              (2,3)  (1,7)  (1,7)  (1,7)
                              (2,5)  (2,3)  (1,8)  (1,8)
                              (3,4)  (2,4)  (2,3)  (1,9)
                                     (2,6)  (2,5)  (2,3)
                                     (3,5)  (2,7)  (2,4)
                                            (3,6)  (2,6)
                                            (4,5)  (2,8)
                                                   (3,4)
                                                   (3,7)
                                                   (4,6)
		

Crossrefs

The unrestricted version is A000217, ranks A001358.
For all subsets instead of just pairs we have A088314, complement A365322.
For strict partitions we have A088571, complement A088528.
The case of nonnegative coefficients is A365314, for all subsets A365073.
The (binary) complement is A365321, nonnegative A365320.
A004526 counts partitions of length 2, shift right for strict.
A007865 counts sum-free subsets, complement A093971.
A179822 and A326080 count sum-closed subsets.
A326083 and A124506 appear to count combination-free subsets.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions.
A364914 and A365046 count combination-full subsets.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    combp[n_,y_]:=With[{s=Table[{k,i},{k,y},{i,1,Floor[n/k]}]},Select[Tuples[s],Total[Times@@@#]==n&]];
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n],{2}],combp[n,#]!={}&]],{n,0,30}]
  • Python
    from itertools import count
    from sympy import divisors
    def A365315(n):
        a = set()
        for i in range(1,n+1):
            for j in count(i,i):
                if j >= n:
                    break
                for d in divisors(n-j):
                    if d>=i:
                        break
                    a.add((d,i))
        return len(a) # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 13 2023

A367405 Triangle read by rows where T(n,k) is the number of strict integer partitions of n with two distinct parts summing to k.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 2, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 0, 1, 1, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 3, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 4, 2, 2, 3, 2, 3, 2, 3, 4, 2, 2, 3, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 5, 3, 2, 4, 3, 4, 4, 5, 3, 4, 5, 3, 3, 5, 4, 4, 5, 5, 5, 4, 4, 6, 4, 3, 6, 5, 6, 5, 7, 5, 7, 4, 5, 6, 5, 5, 7, 7, 8, 7, 8, 8, 7, 7, 5, 5, 7
Offset: 3

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Nov 18 2023

Keywords

Examples

			Triangle begins:
  1
  0  1
  0  0  2
  1  1  1  2
  1  0  1  1  3
  1  1  1  1  2  3
  1  1  1  2  2  2  4
  2  2  3  2  3  2  3  4
  2  2  3  2  3  3  3  3  5
  3  2  4  3  4  4  5  3  4  5
  3  3  5  4  4  5  5  5  4  4  6
  4  3  6  5  6  5  7  5  7  4  5  6
  5  5  7  7  8  7  8  8  7  7  5  5  7
  6  5  9  8 10  7 10  9 10  7  9  5  6  7
  7  7 10 10 12 11 11 11 12 10  9  9  6  6  8
  9  7 13 11 15 12 13 13 15 13 13  9 11  6  7  8
Row n = 9 counts the following strict partitions:
  (6,2,1)  (5,3,1)  (4,3,2)  (5,3,1)  (6,2,1)  (6,2,1)  (8,1)
                             (4,3,2)  (4,3,2)  (5,3,1)  (7,2)
                                                        (6,3)
                                                        (5,4)
Row n = 13 counts the following strict partitions (A=10, B=11, C=12):
  A21   931   841   751   652   751   841   931   A21  A21  C1
  7321  7321  832   742   643   7321  742   832   832  931  B2
  6421  5431  7321  6421  6421  652   7321  7321  742  841  A3
              6421  5431  5431  6421  643   643   652  751  94
              5431              5431  5431  6421            85
                                                            76
		

Crossrefs

Column n = k is A004526.
Column k = 3 is A025148.
For subsets instead of partitions we have A365541, non-binary A365381.
The non-binary version is A365661, non-strict A365543.
The non-binary complement is A365663, non-strict A046663.
Row sums are A366741, non-strict A366738.
The non-strict version is A367404.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[IntegerPartitions[n], UnsameQ@@#&&MemberQ[Total/@Subsets[#,{2}], k]&]], {n,3,10}, {k,3,n}]

A365042 Number of subsets of {1..n} containing n such that some element can be written as a positive linear combination of the others.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 2, 4, 5, 9, 11, 17, 21, 29, 36, 50, 60, 78, 95, 123, 147, 185, 221, 274, 325, 399, 472, 574, 672, 810, 945, 1131, 1316, 1557, 1812, 2137, 2462, 2892, 3322, 3881, 4460, 5176, 5916, 6846, 7817, 8993, 10250, 11765, 13333, 15280, 17308, 19731, 22306
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 23 2023

Keywords

Comments

Sets of this type may be called "positive combination-full".
Also subsets of {1..n} containing n whose greatest element can be written as a positive linear combination of the others.

Examples

			The subset {3,4,10} has 10 = 2*3 + 1*4 so is counted under a(10).
The a(0) = 0 through a(7) = 11 subsets:
  .  .  {1,2}  {1,3}    {1,4}    {1,5}    {1,6}      {1,7}
               {1,2,3}  {2,4}    {1,2,5}  {2,6}      {1,2,7}
                        {1,2,4}  {1,3,5}  {3,6}      {1,3,7}
                        {1,3,4}  {1,4,5}  {1,2,6}    {1,4,7}
                                 {2,3,5}  {1,3,6}    {1,5,7}
                                          {1,4,6}    {1,6,7}
                                          {1,5,6}    {2,3,7}
                                          {2,4,6}    {2,5,7}
                                          {1,2,3,6}  {3,4,7}
                                                     {1,2,3,7}
                                                     {1,2,4,7}
		

Crossrefs

The nonnegative complement is A124506, first differences of A326083.
The binary complement is A288728, first differences of A007865.
First differences of A365043.
The complement is counted by A365045, first differences of A365044.
The nonnegative version is A365046, first differences of A364914.
Without re-usable parts we have A365069, first differences of A364534.
The binary version is A365070, first differences of A093971.
A085489 and A364755 count subsets with no sum of two distinct elements.
A088314 counts sets that can be linearly combined to obtain n.
A088809 and A364756 count subsets with some sum of two distinct elements.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions, complement A364839.
A364913 counts combination-full partitions.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    combp[n_,y_]:=With[{s=Table[{k,i},{k,y},{i,1,Floor[n/k]}]},Select[Tuples[s],Total[Times@@@#]==n&]];
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n]],MemberQ[#,n]&&Or@@Table[combp[#[[k]],Union[Delete[#,k]]]!={},{k,Length[#]}]&]],{n,0,10}]

Formula

a(n) = A088314(n) - 1.

A365070 Number of subsets of {1..n} containing n and some element equal to the sum of two other (possibly equal) elements.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 1, 5, 9, 24, 46, 109, 209, 469, 922, 1932, 3858, 7952, 15831, 32214, 64351, 129813, 259566, 521681, 1042703, 2091626, 4182470, 8376007, 16752524, 33530042, 67055129, 134165194, 268328011, 536763582, 1073523097, 2147268041, 4294505929, 8589506814, 17178978145
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 24 2023

Keywords

Comments

These are binary sum-full sets where elements can be re-used. The complement is counted by A288728. The non-binary version is A365046, complement A124506. For non-re-usable parts we have A364756, complement A085489.

Examples

			The subset {1,3} has no element equal to the sum of two others, so is not counted under a(3).
The subset {3,4,5} has no element equal to the sum of two others, so is not counted under a(5).
The subset {1,3,4} has 4 = 1 + 3, so is counted under a(4).
The subset {2,4,5} has 4 = 2 + 2, so is counted under a(5).
The a(0) = 0 through a(5) = 9 subsets:
  .  .  {1,2}  {1,2,3}  {2,4}      {1,2,5}
                        {1,2,4}    {1,4,5}
                        {1,3,4}    {2,3,5}
                        {2,3,4}    {2,4,5}
                        {1,2,3,4}  {1,2,3,5}
                                   {1,2,4,5}
                                   {1,3,4,5}
                                   {2,3,4,5}
                                   {1,2,3,4,5}
		

Crossrefs

The complement w/o re-usable parts is A085489, first differences of A364755.
First differences of A093971.
The non-binary complement is A124506, first differences of A326083.
The complement is counted by A288728, first differences of A007865.
For partitions (not requiring n) we have A363225, strict A363226.
The case without re-usable parts is A364756, firsts differences of A088809.
The non-binary version is A365046, first differences of A364914.
A116861 and A364916 count linear combinations of strict partitions.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions, complement A364839.
A364913 counts combination-full partitions.
A365006 counts no positive combination-full strict ptns.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n]], MemberQ[#,n]&&Intersection[#,Total /@ Tuples[#,2]]!={}&]], {n,0,10}]

Formula

First differences of A093971.

Extensions

a(21) onwards added (using A093971) by Andrew Howroyd, Jan 13 2024

A367394 Number of integer partitions of n whose length is a semi-sum of the parts.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 3, 3, 6, 7, 14, 15, 25, 30, 46, 54, 80, 97, 139, 169, 229, 282, 382, 461, 607, 746, 962, 1173, 1499, 1817, 2302, 2787, 3467, 4201, 5216, 6260, 7702, 9261, 11294, 13524, 16418, 19572, 23658, 28141, 33756, 40081, 47949, 56662, 67493, 79639
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Nov 19 2023

Keywords

Comments

We define a semi-sum of a multiset to be any sum of a 2-element submultiset. This is different from sums of pairs of elements. For example, 2 is the sum of a pair of elements of {1}, but there are no semi-sums.

Examples

			For the partition y = (3,3,2,1) we have 4 = 3 + 1, so y is counted under a(9).
The a(2) = 1 through a(10) = 14 partitions:
  (11)  .  (211)  (221)  (321)   (421)   (521)    (621)    (721)
                         (2211)  (2221)  (2222)   (3222)   (3322)
                         (3111)  (3211)  (3221)   (3321)   (3331)
                                         (3311)   (4221)   (4222)
                                         (32111)  (4311)   (4321)
                                         (41111)  (32211)  (5221)
                                                  (42111)  (5311)
                                                           (32221)
                                                           (33211)
                                                           (42211)
                                                           (43111)
                                                           (331111)
                                                           (421111)
                                                           (511111)
		

Crossrefs

The following sequences count and rank integer partitions and finite sets according to whether their length is a subset-sum, linear combination, or semi-sum of the parts. The current sequence is starred.
sum-full sum-free comb-full comb-free semi-full semi-free
-----------------------------------------------------------
A000041 counts partitions, strict A000009.
A002865 counts partitions whose length is a part, complement A229816.
A236912 counts partitions containing no semi-sum, ranks A364461.
A237113 counts partitions containing a semi-sum, ranks A364462.
A237668 counts sum-full partitions, sum-free A237667.
A366738 counts semi-sums of partitions, strict A366741.
Triangles:
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A365543 counts partitions with a subset-sum k, strict A365661.
A367404 counts partitions with a semi-sum k, strict A367405.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[IntegerPartitions[n], MemberQ[Total/@Subsets[#,{2}], Length[#]]&]], {n,0,10}]

A367395 Number of strict integer partitions of n whose length is the sum of two distinct parts.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 5, 5, 7, 8, 11, 13, 17, 19, 25, 28, 35, 41, 49, 57, 68, 78, 92, 107, 124, 143, 166, 192, 220, 254, 291, 335, 382, 439, 499, 572, 649, 741, 840, 956, 1080, 1226, 1383, 1566, 1762, 1988, 2235, 2515, 2822, 3166, 3547
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Nov 19 2023

Keywords

Examples

			The strict partition (5,3,2,1) has 4 = 3 + 1 so is counted under a(11).
The a(6) = 1 through a(17) = 7 strict partitions (A..E = 10..14):
  321  421  521  621  721   821   921   A21   B21   C21    D21    E21
                      4321  5321  6321  5431  6431  6531   7531   7631
                                        7321  8321  7431   8431   8531
                                                    9321   A321   9431
                                                    54321  64321  B321
                                                                  65321
                                                                  74321
		

Crossrefs

The following sequences count and rank integer partitions and finite sets according to whether their length is a subset-sum, linear combination, or semi-sum of the parts. The current sequence is starred.
sum-full sum-free comb-full comb-free semi-full semi-free
-----------------------------------------------------------
A000041 counts partitions, strict A000009.
A002865 counts partitions whose length is a part, complement A229816.
A088809/A093971 count twofold sum-full subsets.
A236912 counts partitions containing no semi-sum, ranks A364461.
A237113 counts partitions containing a semi-sum, ranks A364462.
A237668 counts sum-full partitions, sum-free A237667.
A366738 counts semi-sums of partitions, strict A366741.
Triangles:
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A365541 counts subsets with a semi-sum k.
A367404 counts partitions with a semi-sum k, strict A367405.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[IntegerPartitions[n], UnsameQ@@#&&MemberQ[Total/@Subsets[#,{2}], Length[#]]&]], {n,0,30}]
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