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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A038622 Triangular array that counts rooted polyominoes.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 1, 5, 3, 1, 13, 9, 4, 1, 35, 26, 14, 5, 1, 96, 75, 45, 20, 6, 1, 267, 216, 140, 71, 27, 7, 1, 750, 623, 427, 238, 105, 35, 8, 1, 2123, 1800, 1288, 770, 378, 148, 44, 9, 1, 6046, 5211, 3858, 2436, 1296, 570, 201, 54, 10, 1, 17303, 15115, 11505, 7590, 4302, 2067, 825, 265
Offset: 0

Views

Author

N. J. A. Sloane, torsten.sillke(AT)lhsystems.com

Keywords

Comments

The PARI program gives any row k and any n-th term for this triangular array in square or right triangle array format. - Randall L Rathbun, Jan 20 2002
Triangle T(n,k), 0 <= k <= n, read by rows given by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = 2*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 27 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = x*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + y*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1. Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007
Triangle read by rows = partial sums of A064189 terms starting from the right. - Gary W. Adamson, Oct 25 2008
Column k has e.g.f. exp(x)*(Bessel_I(k,2x)+Bessel_I(k+1,2x)). - Paul Barry, Mar 08 2011

Examples

			From _Paul Barry_, Mar 08 2011: (Start)
Triangle begins
     1;
     2,    1;
     5,    3,    1;
    13,    9,    4,   1;
    35,   26,   14,   5,   1;
    96,   75,   45,  20,   6,   1;
   267,  216,  140,  71,  27,   7,  1;
   750,  623,  427, 238, 105,  35,  8, 1;
  2123, 1800, 1288, 770, 378, 148, 44, 9, 1;
Production matrix is
  2, 1,
  1, 1, 1,
  0, 1, 1, 1,
  0, 0, 1, 1, 1,
  0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1,
  0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1,
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1,
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1,
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1
(End)
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A005773 (1st column), A005774 (2nd column), A005775, A066822, A000244 (row sums).

Programs

  • Haskell
    import Data.List (transpose)
    a038622 n k = a038622_tabl !! n !! k
    a038622_row n = a038622_tabl !! n
    a038622_tabl = iterate (\row -> map sum $
       transpose [tail row ++ [0,0], row ++ [0], [head row] ++ row]) [1]
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Feb 26 2013
  • Maple
    T := (n,k) -> simplify(GegenbauerC(n-k,-n+1,-1/2)+GegenbauerC(n-k-1,-n+1,-1/2)):
    for n from 1 to 9 do seq(T(n,k),k=1..n) od; # Peter Luschny, May 12 2016
  • Mathematica
    nmax = 10; t[n_ /; n > 0, k_ /; k >= 1] := t[n, k] = t[n-1, k-1] + t[n-1, k] + t[n-1, k+1]; t[0, 0] = 1; t[0, ] = 0; t[?Negative, ?Negative] = 0; t[n, 0] := 2 t[n-1, 0] + t[n-1, 1]; Flatten[ Table[ t[n, k], {n, 0, nmax}, {k, 0, n}]](* Jean-François Alcover, Nov 09 2011 *)
  • PARI
    s=[0,1]; {A038622(n,k)=if(n==0,1,t=(2*(n+k)*(n+k-1)*s[2]+3*(n+k-1)*(n+k-2)*s[1])/((n+2*k-1)*n); s[1]=s[2]; s[2]=t; t)}
    

Formula

a(n, k) = a(n-1, k-1) + a(n-1, k) + a(n-1, k+1) for k>0, a(n, k) = 2*a(n-1, k) + a(n-1, k+1) for k=0.
Riordan array ((sqrt(1-2x-3x^2)+3x-1)/(2x(1-3x)),(1-x-sqrt(1-2x-3x^2))/(2x)). Inverse of Riordan array ((1-x)/(1+x+x^2),x/(1+x+x^2)). First column is A005773(n+1). Row sums are 3^n (A000244). If L=A038622, then L*L' is the Hankel matrix for A005773(n+1), where L' is the transpose of L. - Paul Barry, Sep 18 2006
T(n,k) = GegenbauerC(n-k,-n+1,-1/2) + GegenbauerC(n-k-1,-n+1,-1/2). In this form also the missing first column of the triangle 1,1,1,3,7,19,... (cf. A002426) can be computed. - Peter Luschny, May 12 2016
From Peter Bala, Jul 12 2021: (Start)
T(n,k) = Sum_{j = k..n} binomial(n,j)*binomial(j,floor((j-k)/2)).
Matrix product of Riordan arrays ( 1/(1 - x), x/(1 - x) ) * ( (1 - x*c(x^2))/(1 - 2*x), x*c(x^2) ) = A007318 * A061554 (triangle version), where c(x) = (1 - sqrt(1 - 4*x))/(2*x) is the g.f. of the Catalan numbers A000108.
Triangle equals A007318^(-1) * A092392 * A007318. (End)
The n-th row polynomial R(n,x) equals the n-th degree Taylor polynomial of the function (1 + x)*(1 + x + x^2)^n expanded about the point x = 0. - Peter Bala, Sep 06 2022

Extensions

More terms from David W. Wilson

A111418 Right-hand side of odd-numbered rows of Pascal's triangle.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 1, 10, 5, 1, 35, 21, 7, 1, 126, 84, 36, 9, 1, 462, 330, 165, 55, 11, 1, 1716, 1287, 715, 286, 78, 13, 1, 6435, 5005, 3003, 1365, 455, 105, 15, 1, 24310, 19448, 12376, 6188, 2380, 680, 136, 17, 1, 92378, 75582, 50388
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Nov 13 2005

Keywords

Comments

Riordan array (c(x)/sqrt(1-4*x),x*c(x)^2) where c(x) is g.f. of A000108. Unsigned version of A113187. Diagonal sums are A014301(n+1).
Triangle T(n,k),0<=k<=n, read by rows defined by :T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=3*T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+2*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 22 2007
Reversal of A122366. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 22 2007
Column k has e.g.f. exp(2x)(Bessel_I(k,2x)+Bessel_I(k+1,2x)). - Paul Barry, Jun 06 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=x*T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+y*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1 . Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007
Diagonal sums are A014301(n+1). - Paul Barry, Mar 08 2011
This triangle T(n,k) appears in the expansion of odd powers of Fibonacci numbers F=A000045 in terms of F-numbers with multiples of odd numbers as indices. See the Ozeki reference, p. 108, Lemma 2. The formula is: F_l^(2*n+1) = sum(T(n,k)*(-1)^((n-k)*(l+1))* F_{(2*k+1)*l}, k=0..n)/5^n, n >= 0, l >= 0. - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 24 2012
Central terms give A052203. - Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 14 2014
This triangle appears in the expansion of (4*x)^n in terms of the polynomials Todd(n, x):= T(2*n+1, sqrt(x))/sqrt(x) = sum(A084930(n,m)*x^m), n >= 0. This follows from the inversion of the lower triangular Riordan matrix built from A084930 and comparing the g.f. of the row polynomials. - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 05 2014
From Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 15 2014: (Start)
This triangle is the inverse of the signed Riordan triangle (-1)^(n-m)*A111125(n,m).
This triangle T(n,k) appears in the expansion of x^n in terms of the polynomials todd(k, x):= T(2*k+1, sqrt(x)/2)/(sqrt(x)/2) = S(k, x-2) - S(k-1, x-2) with the row polynomials T and S for the triangles A053120 and A049310, respectively: x^n = sum(T(n,k)*todd(k, x), k=0..n). Compare this with the preceding comment.
The A- and Z-sequences for this Riordan triangle are [1, 2, 1, repeated 0] and [3, 1, repeated 0]. For A- and Z-sequences for Riordan triangles see the W. Lang link under A006232. This corresponds to the recurrences given in the Philippe Deléham, Mar 22 2007 comment above. (End)

Examples

			From _Wolfdieter Lang_, Aug 05 2014: (Start)
The triangle T(n,k) begins:
n\k      0      1      2      3     4     5    6    7   8  9  10 ...
0:       1
1:       3      1
2:      10      5      1
3:      35     21      7      1
4:     126     84     36      9     1
5:     462    330    165     55    11     1
6:    1716   1287    715    286    78    13    1
7:    6435   5005   3003   1365   455   105   15    1
8:   24310  19448  12376   6188  2380   680  136   17   1
9:   92378  75582  50388  27132 11628  3876  969  171  19  1
10: 352716 293930 203490 116280 54264 20349 5985 1330 210 21   1
...
Expansion examples (for the Todd polynomials see A084930 and a comment above):
(4*x)^2 = 10*Todd(n,  0) + 5*Todd(n, 1) + 1*Todd(n, 2) = 10*1 + 5*(-3 + 4*x) + 1*(5 - 20*x + 16*x^2).
(4*x)^3 =  35*1 + 21*(-3 + 4*x) + 7*(5 - 20*x + 16*x^2) + (-7 + 56*x - 112*x^2 +64*x^3)*1. (End)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Production matrix is
3, 1,
1, 2, 1,
0, 1, 2, 1,
0, 0, 1, 2, 1,
0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1,
0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1
- _Paul Barry_, Mar 08 2011
Application to odd powers of Fibonacci numbers F, row n=2:
F_l^5 = (10*(-1)^(2*(l+1))*F_l + 5*(-1)^(1*(l+1))*F_{3*l} + 1*F_{5*l})/5^2, l >= 0. - _Wolfdieter Lang_, Aug 24 2012
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Haskell
    a111418 n k = a111418_tabl !! n !! k
    a111418_row n = a111418_tabl !! n
    a111418_tabl = map reverse a122366_tabl
    -- Reinhard Zumkeller, Mar 14 2014
  • Mathematica
    Table[Binomial[2*n+1, n-k], {n,0,10}, {k,0,n}] (* G. C. Greubel, May 22 2017 *)
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0,
    T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]];
    Table[T[n, k, 3, 2], {n, 0, 10}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, May 22 2017 *)

Formula

T(n, k) = C(2*n+1, n-k).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n, k) = 4^n.
Sum_{k, 0<=k<=n}(-1)^k *T(n,k) = binomial(2*n,n) = A000984(n). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 22 2007
T(n,k) = sum{j=k..n, C(n,j)*2^(n-j)*C(j,floor((j-k)/2))}. - Paul Barry, Jun 06 2007
Sum_{k, k>=0} T(m,k)*T(n,k) = T(m+n,0)= A001700(m+n). - Philippe Deléham, Nov 22 2009
G.f. row polynomials: ((1+x) - (1-x)/sqrt(1-4*z))/(2*(x - (1+x)^2*z))
(see the Riordan property mentioned in a comment above). - Wolfdieter Lang, Aug 05 2014

A126075 Triangle T(n,k), 0 <= k <= n, read by rows, defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = 2*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 1, 5, 2, 1, 12, 6, 2, 1, 30, 14, 7, 2, 1, 74, 37, 16, 8, 2, 1, 185, 90, 45, 18, 9, 2, 1, 460, 230, 108, 54, 20, 10, 2, 1, 1150, 568, 284, 128, 64, 22, 11, 2, 1, 2868, 1434, 696, 348, 150, 75, 24, 12, 2, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Mar 02 2007

Keywords

Comments

Riordan array (c(x^2)/(1-2xc(x^2)),xc(x^2)) where c(x)=g.f. of Catalan numbers A000108. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 18 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=x*T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+y*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1. Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007

Examples

			Triangle begins:
     1;
     2,    1;
     5,    2,   1;
    12,    6,   2,   1;
    30,   14,   7,   2,   1;
    74,   37,  16,   8,   2,  1;
   185,   90,  45,  18,   9,  2,  1;
   460,  230, 108,  54,  20, 10,  2,  1;
  1150,  568, 284, 128,  64, 22, 11,  2, 1;
  2868, 1434, 696, 348, 150, 75, 24, 12, 2, 1;
		

Crossrefs

Programs

  • Maple
    A126075 := proc (n, k)
    add( 2^(n-k-2*j)*binomial(n, j), j = 0..floor((n-k)/2) ) - add( 2^(n-k-2-2*j)*binomial(n, j), j = 0..floor((n-k-2)/2) )
    end proc:
    # display sequence in triangular form
    for n from 0 to 10 do seq(A126075(n, k), k = 0..n) end do;
    # Peter Bala, Feb 20 2018
  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0, T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]]; Table[T[n, k, 2, 0], {n, 0, 49}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten  (* G. C. Greubel, Apr 21 2017 *)

Formula

Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k) = A127358(n). T(n,0)=A054341(n).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(-k+1) = 2^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 25 2007
From Peter Bala, Feb 20 2018: (Start)
T(n,k) = Sum_{j = 0..floor((n-k)/2)} 2^(n-k-2*j)*binomial(n, j) - Sum_{j = 0..floor((n-k-2)/2)} 2^(n-k-2-2*j)*binomial(n, j), 0 <= k <= n. - Peter Bala, Feb 20 2018
The n-th row polynomial in descending powers of x is the n-th Taylor polynomial of the rational function (1 - x^2)/(1 - 2*x) * (1 + x^2)^n about 0. For example, for n = 4, (1 - x^2)/(1 - 2*x) * (1 + x^2)^4 = (30*x^4 + 14*x*3 + 7*x^2 + 2*x + 1) + O(x^5). (End)

A110877 Triangle T(n,k), 0 <= k <= n, read by rows, defined by: T(0,0) = 1, T(n,k) = 0 if n= 1: T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + x*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) with x = 3.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 2, 4, 1, 6, 15, 7, 1, 21, 58, 37, 10, 1, 79, 232, 179, 68, 13, 1, 311, 954, 837, 396, 108, 16, 1, 1265, 4010, 3861, 2133, 736, 157, 19, 1, 5275, 17156, 17726, 10996, 4498, 1226, 215, 22, 1, 22431, 74469, 81330, 55212, 25716, 8391, 1893
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Sep 19 2005

Keywords

Comments

Similar to A064189 (x = 1) and to A039599 (x = 2).
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = x*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + y*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1. Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007
Row sums yield A126568. - Philippe Deléham, Oct 10 2007
5^n = (n-th row terms) dot (first n+1 terms in the series (1, 4, 7, 10, ...)). Example for row 4: 5^4 = 625 = (21, 58, 37, 10, 1) dot (1, 4, 7, 10, 13) = (21 + 232 + 259 + 100 + 13). - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 15 2011
Riordan array (2/(1+x+sqrt(1-6*x+5*x^2)), (1-3*x-sqrt(1-6*x+5*x^2))/(2*x)). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 04 2013

Examples

			Triangle begins:
      1;
      1,     1;
      2,     4,     1;
      6,    15,     7,     1;
     21,    58,    37,    10,     1;
     79,   232,   179,    68,    13,    1;
    311,   954,   837,   396,   108,   16,    1;
   1265,  4010,  3861,  2133,   736,  157,   19,   1;
   5275, 17156, 17726, 10996,  4498, 1226,  215,  22,  1;
  22431, 74469, 81330, 55212, 25716, 8391, 1893, 282, 25, 1;
  ...
From _Philippe Deléham_, Nov 07 2011: (Start)
Production matrix begins:
  1, 1;
  1, 3, 1;
  0, 1, 3, 1;
  0, 0, 1, 3, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1;
  ... (End)
		

Crossrefs

The inverse of A126126.

Programs

  • Maple
    A110877 := proc(n,k)
        if k > n then
            0;
        elif n= 0 then
            1;
        elif k = 0 then
            procname(n-1,0)+procname(n-1,1) ;
        else
            procname(n-1,k-1)+3*procname(n-1,k)+procname(n-1,k+1) ;
        end if;
    end proc: # R. J. Mathar, Sep 06 2013
  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0, T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]]; Table[T[n, k, 1, 3], {n, 0, 49}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, Apr 21 2017 *)

Formula

T(n, 0) = A033321(n) and for k >= 1: T(n, k) = Sum_{j>=1} T(n-j, k-1)*A002212(j).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(m, k)*T(n, k) = T(m+n, 0) = A033321(m+n).
The triangle may also be generated from M^n * [1,0,0,0,...], where M = an infinite tridiagonal matrix with 1's in the super and subdiagonals and (1,3,3,3,...) in the main diagonal. - Gary W. Adamson, Dec 17 2006
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(3*k+1) = 5^n. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 26 2007
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k) = A126568(n). - Philippe Deléham, Oct 10 2007

A125906 Riordan array (1/(1 + 5*x + x^2), x/(1 + 5*x + x^2))^(-1); inverse of Riordan array A123967.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 5, 1, 26, 10, 1, 140, 77, 15, 1, 777, 540, 153, 20, 1, 4425, 3630, 1325, 254, 25, 1, 25755, 23900, 10509, 2620, 380, 30, 1, 152675, 155764, 79065, 23989, 4550, 531, 35, 1, 919139, 1010560, 575078, 203560, 47270, 7240, 707, 40, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Feb 04 2007

Keywords

Comments

T(0)=A053121, T(1)=A064189, T(2)=A039598, T(3)=A091965, T(4)=A052179.
Triangle read by rows: T(n,k) = number of lattice paths from (0,0) to (n,k) that do not go below the line y=0 and consist of steps U=(1,1), D=(1,-1) and five types of steps H=(1,0); example: T(3,1)=77 because we have UDU, UUD, 25 HHU paths, 25 HUH paths and 25 UHH paths. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = x*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + y*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1. Other triangles arise from choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007
7^n = (n-th row terms) dot (first n+1 terms in 1,2,3,...). Example: 7^3 = 343 = (140, 77, 15, 1) dot (1, 2, 3, 4) = (140 + 154 + 45 + 4) = 343. - Gary W. Adamson, Jun 17 2011
A subset of the "family of triangles" (Deleham comment of Sep 25 2007) is the succession of binomial transforms beginning with triangle A053121, (0,0); giving -> A064189, (1,1); -> A039598, (2,2); -> A091965, (3,3); -> A052179, (4,4); -> A125906, (5,5) ->, etc; generally the binomial transform of the triangle generated from (n,n) = that generated from ((n+1),(n+1)). - Gary W. Adamson, Aug 03 2011
Riordan array (f(x), x*f(x)) where f(x) is the o.g.f. of A182401. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 04 2013

Examples

			Triangle begins
       1;
       5,       1;
      26,      10,      1;
     140,      77,     15,      1;
     777,     540,    153,     20,     1;
    4425,    3630,   1325,    254,    25,    1;
   25755,   23900,  10509,   2620,   380,   30,   1;
  152675,  155764,  79065,  23989,  4550,  531,  35,  1;
  919139, 1010560, 575078, 203560, 47270, 7240, 707, 40, 1;
From _Philippe Deléham_, Nov 07 2011: (Start)
Production matrix begins
  5, 1;
  1, 5, 1,;
  0, 1, 5, 1;
  0, 0, 1, 5, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 1, 5, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 5, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 5, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 5, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 5, 1; (End)
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A182401.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0,  T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]];
    Table[T[n, k, 5, 5], {n, 0, 10}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, May 22 2017 *)

Formula

Triangle T(5) where T(x) is defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + x*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1). Sum_{k=0..n} T(m,k)*T(n,k) = T(m+n,0). Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k) = A122898(n).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(k+1) = 7^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2007
T(n,0) = A182401(n). - Philippe Deléham, Mar 04 2013
The n-th row polynomial R(n,x) equals the n-th degree Taylor polynomial of the function (1 - x^2)*(1 + 5*x + x^2)^n expanded about the point x = 0. - Peter Bala, Sep 06 2022

A126093 Inverse binomial matrix applied to A110877.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 1, 2, 6, 4, 1, 6, 18, 15, 6, 1, 18, 57, 54, 28, 8, 1, 57, 186, 193, 118, 45, 10, 1, 186, 622, 690, 474, 218, 66, 12, 1, 622, 2120, 2476, 1856, 976, 362, 91, 14, 1, 2120, 7338, 8928, 7164, 4170, 1791, 558, 120, 16, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Mar 03 2007

Keywords

Comments

Diagonal sums are A065601. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 05 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0) = x*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + y*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1 . Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007

Examples

			Triangle begins:
     1;
     0,    1;
     1,    2,    1;
     2,    6,    4,    1;
     6,   18,   15,    6,    1;
    18,   57,   54,   28,    8,    1;
    57,  186,  193,  118,   45,   10,   1;
   186,  622,  690,  474,  218,   66,  12,   1;
   622, 2120, 2476, 1856,  976,  362,  91,  14,  1;
  2120, 7338, 8928, 7164, 4170, 1791, 558, 120, 16, 1;
Production matrix begins
  0, 1;
  1, 2, 1;
  0, 1, 2, 1;
  0, 0, 1, 2, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1;
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 2, 1;
- _Philippe Deléham_, Nov 07 2011
		

Programs

  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_]:= 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_]:= x*T[n-1,0,x,y] + T[n-1,1,x,y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_]:= T[n, k, x, y]= If[k<0 || k>n, 0, T[n-1,k-1,x,y] + y*T[n-1,k,x,y] + T[n-1,k+1,x,y]]; Table[T[n,k,0,2], {n,0,12}, {k,0,n}]//Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, Apr 21 2017 *)
  • Sage
    @CachedFunction
    def T(n, k, x, y):
        if (k<0 or k>n): return 0
        elif (n==0 and k==0): return 1
        elif (k==0): return x*T(n-1,0,x,y) + T(n-1,1,x,y)
        else: return T(n-1,k-1,x,y) + y*T(n-1,k,x,y) + T(n-1,k+1,x,y)
    [[T(n,k,0,2) for k in (0..n)] for n in (0..12)] # G. C. Greubel, Jan 27 2020

Formula

Triangle T(n,k), 0<=k<=n, read by rows defined by : T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0) = T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + 2*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1.
Sum_{k=0..n} T(m,k)*T(n,k) = T(m+n,0) = A000957(m+n+1).
Sum_{k=0..n-1} T(n,k) = A026641(n), for n>=1. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 05 2007
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(3k+1) = 4^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 22 2007

A126954 Triangle T(n,k), 0 <= k <= n, read by rows given by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = 3*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 3, 1, 10, 4, 1, 34, 15, 5, 1, 117, 54, 21, 6, 1, 405, 192, 81, 28, 7, 1, 1407, 678, 301, 116, 36, 8, 1, 4899, 2386, 1095, 453, 160, 45, 9, 1, 17083, 8380, 3934, 1708, 658, 214, 55, 10, 1, 59629, 29397, 14022, 6300, 2580, 927, 279, 66, 11, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Mar 19 2007

Keywords

Comments

This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = x*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + y*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1. Other triangles arise from choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007

Examples

			Triangle begins:
     1;
     3,    1;
    10,    4,    1;
    34,   15,    5,   1;
   117,   54,   21,   6,   1;
   405,  192,   81,  28,   7,  1;
  1407,  678,  301, 116,  36,  8, 1;
  4899, 2386, 1095, 453, 160, 45, 9, 1;
		

Programs

  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0, T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]]; Table[T[n, k, 3, 1], {n, 0, 10}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, May 22 2017 *)

Formula

Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k) = A126932(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(m,k)*T(n,k) = T(m+n,0) = A059738(m+n).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(-k+1) = 3^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 26 2007

A124733 Triangle read by rows: row n is the first row of the matrix M[n]^(n-1), where M[n] is the n X n tridiagonal matrix with main diagonal (2,3,3,...) and super- and subdiagonals (1,1,1,...).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 1, 5, 5, 1, 15, 21, 8, 1, 51, 86, 46, 11, 1, 188, 355, 235, 80, 14, 1, 731, 1488, 1140, 489, 123, 17, 1, 2950, 6335, 5397, 2730, 875, 175, 20, 1, 12235, 27352, 25256, 14462, 5530, 1420, 236, 23, 1, 51822, 119547, 117582, 74172, 32472, 10026, 2151, 306, 26, 1
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

With a different offset: Triangle T(n,k), 0<=k<=n, read by rows given by : T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=2*T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+3*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 27 2007
Equals A007318*A039599 (when written as lower triangular matrix). - Philippe Deléham, Jun 16 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=x*T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+y*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1 . Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007
5^n = (n-th row terms) dot (first n+1 odd integers). Example: 5^4 = 625 = (51, 86, 46, 11, 1) dot (1, 3, 5, 7, 9) = (51 + 258 + 230 + 77 + 9) = 625. [Gary W. Adamson, Jun 13 2011]

Examples

			Row 3 is (5,5,1) because M[3]=[2,1,0;1,3,1;0,1,3] and M[3]^2=[5,5,1;5,11,6;1,6,10].
Triangle starts:
1;
2, 1;
5, 5, 1;
15, 21, 8, 1;
51, 86, 46, 11, 1;
188, 355, 235, 80, 14, 1;
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A110877, A091965, A002212, A007317, A026375 (row sums).

Programs

  • Maple
    with(linalg): m:=proc(i,j) if i=1 and j=1 then 2 elif i=j then 3 elif abs(i-j)=1 then 1 else 0 fi end: for n from 3 to 11 do A[n]:=matrix(n,n,m): B[n]:=multiply(seq(A[n],i=1..n-1)) od: 1; 2,1; for n from 3 to 11 do seq(B[n][1,j],j=1..n) od; # yields sequence in triangular form
    T := (n,k) -> (-1)^(n-k)*simplify(GegenbauerC(n-k,-n+1,3/2) + GegenbauerC(n-k-1,-n+1,3/2)): seq(seq(T(n,k), k=1..n), n=1..10); # Peter Luschny, May 13 2016
  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0,  T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]];
    Table[T[n, k, 2, 3], {n, 0, 49}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, Apr 21 2017 *)

Formula

Sum_{k=0..n} (-1)^(n-k)*T(n,k) = (-1)^n. - Philippe Deléham, Feb 27 2007
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(2*k+1) = 5^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 27 2007
T(n,k) = (-1)^(n-k)*(GegenbauerC(n-k,-n+1,3/2) + GegenbauerC(n-k-1,-n+1,3/2)). - Peter Luschny, May 13 2016
From Peter Bala, Sep 06 2022: (Start)
The following assume the row and column indexing start at 0.
Riordan array (f(x), x*g(x)), where f(x) = ( 1 - sqrt((1 - 5*x)/(1 - x)) )/(2*x) = 1 + 2*x + 5*x^2 + 15*x^3 + 51*x^4 + ... is the o.g.f. of A007317 and g(x) = ( 1 - 3*x - sqrt(1 - 6*x + 5*x^2) )/(2*x^2) = 1 + 3*x + 10*x^2 + 36*x^3 + 137*x^4 + .... See A002212.
The n-th row polynomial R(n,x) equals the n-th degree Taylor polynomial of the function (1 - x)*(1 + 3*x + x^2)^n expanded about the point x = 0.
T(n,k) = a(n,k) - a(n,k+1), where a(n,k) = Sum_{j = 0..n} binomial(n,j)* binomial(j,n-k-j)*3^(2*j+k-n). (End)

Extensions

Edited by N. J. A. Sloane, Dec 04 2006

A124576 Triangle read by rows: row n is the first row of the matrix M[n]^(n-1), where M[n] is the n X n tridiagonal matrix with main diagonal (1,4,4,...) and super- and subdiagonals (1,1,1,...).

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 2, 5, 1, 7, 23, 9, 1, 30, 108, 60, 13, 1, 138, 522, 361, 113, 17, 1, 660, 2587, 2079, 830, 182, 21, 1, 3247, 13087, 11733, 5581, 1579, 267, 25, 1, 16334, 67328, 65600, 35636, 12164, 2672, 368, 29, 1, 83662, 351246, 365364, 220308, 86964, 23220, 4173
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Keywords

Comments

Triangle T(n,k), 0<=k<=n, read by rows given by : T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+4*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 27 2007
This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k<0 or if k>n, T(n,0)=x*T(n-1,0)+T(n-1,1), T(n,k)=T(n-1,k-1)+y*T(n-1,k)+T(n-1,k+1) for k>=1 . Other triangles arise by choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007

Examples

			Row 3 is (2,5,1) because M[3]=[1,1,0;1,4,1;0,1,4] and M[3]^2=[2,5,1;5,18,8;1,8,17].
Triangle starts:
1;
1, 1;
2, 5, 1;
7, 23, 9, 1;
30, 108, 60, 13, 1;
138, 522, 361, 113, 17, 1;
		

Crossrefs

Cf. A124575, A124574, A052179, A227081 (row sums).

Programs

  • Maple
    with(linalg): m:=proc(i,j) if i=1 and j=1 then 1 elif i=j then 4 elif abs(i-j)=1 then 1 else 0 fi end: for n from 3 to 11 do A[n]:=matrix(n,n,m): B[n]:=multiply(seq(A[n],i=1..n-1)) od: 1; 1,1; for n from 3 to 11 do seq(B[n][1,j],j=1..n) od; # yields sequence in triangular form
    # alternative
    A124576_row := proc(n)
        if n = 0 then
            return [1] ;
        else
            M := Matrix(n,n) ;
            M[1,1] := 1;
            for c from 2 to n do
                if c = 2 then
                    M[1,c] := 1;
                else
                    M[1,c] := 0;
                end if;
            end do:
            for r from 2 to n do
                for c from 1 to n do
                    if r = c then
                        M[r,c] := 4;
                    elif abs(r-c) = 1 then
                        M[r,c] := 1;
                    else
                        M[r,c] := 0;
                    end if;
                end do:
            end do:
            LinearAlgebra[MatrixPower](M,n-1) ;
            return [seq(%[1,r],r=1..n)] ;
        end if;
    end proc:
    for n from 0 to 10 do
        A124576_row(n) ;
        print(%) ;
    end do: # R. J. Mathar, May 20 2025
  • Mathematica
    M[n_] := SparseArray[{{1, 1} -> 1, Band[{2, 2}] -> 4, Band[{1, 2}] -> 1, Band[{2, 1}] -> 1}, {n, n}]; row[1] = {1}; row[n_] := MatrixPower[M[n], n-1] // First // Normal; Table[row[n], {n, 1, 10}] // Flatten (* Jean-François Alcover, Jan 09 2014 *)

Formula

Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(4*k+1) = 6^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 27 2007

Extensions

Edited by N. J. A. Sloane, Dec 04 2006

A126970 Triangle T(n,k), 0 <= k <= n, read by rows given by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + 3*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 0, 1, 1, 3, 1, 3, 11, 6, 1, 11, 42, 30, 9, 1, 42, 167, 141, 58, 12, 1, 167, 684, 648, 327, 95, 15, 1, 684, 2867, 2955, 1724, 627, 141, 18, 1, 2867, 12240, 13456, 8754, 3746, 1068, 196, 21, 1, 12240, 53043, 61362, 43464, 21060, 7146, 1677, 260, 24, 1
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Philippe Deléham, Mar 19 2007

Keywords

Comments

This triangle belongs to the family of triangles defined by: T(0,0)=1, T(n,k)=0 if k < 0 or if k > n, T(n,0) = x*T(n-1,0) + T(n-1,1), T(n,k) = T(n-1,k-1) + y*T(n-1,k) + T(n-1,k+1) for k >= 1. Other triangles arise from choosing different values for (x,y): (0,0) -> A053121; (0,1) -> A089942; (0,2) -> A126093; (0,3) -> A126970; (1,0)-> A061554; (1,1) -> A064189; (1,2) -> A039599; (1,3) -> A110877; (1,4) -> A124576; (2,0) -> A126075; (2,1) -> A038622; (2,2) -> A039598; (2,3) -> A124733; (2,4) -> A124575; (3,0) -> A126953; (3,1) -> A126954; (3,2) -> A111418; (3,3) -> A091965; (3,4) -> A124574; (4,3) -> A126791; (4,4) -> A052179; (4,5) -> A126331; (5,5) -> A125906. - Philippe Deléham, Sep 25 2007

Examples

			Triangle begins:
    1;
    0,   1;
    1,   3,   1;
    3,  11,   6,   1;
   11,  42,  30,   9,  1;
   42, 167, 141,  58, 12,  1;
  167, 684, 648, 327, 95, 15, 1; ...
From _Philippe Deléham_, Nov 07 2011: (Start)
Production matrix begins:
  0, 1
  1, 3, 1
  0, 1, 3, 1
  0, 0, 1, 3, 1
  0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1
  0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1
  0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 3, 1 (End)
		

Programs

  • Mathematica
    T[0, 0, x_, y_] := 1; T[n_, 0, x_, y_] := x*T[n - 1, 0, x, y] + T[n - 1, 1, x, y]; T[n_, k_, x_, y_] := T[n, k, x, y] = If[k < 0 || k > n, 0,  T[n - 1, k - 1, x, y] + y*T[n - 1, k, x, y] + T[n - 1, k + 1, x, y]]; Table[T[n, k, 0, 3], {n, 0, 49}, {k, 0, n}] // Flatten (* G. C. Greubel, Apr 21 2017 *)

Formula

Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k) = A126952(n).
Sum_{k>=0} T(m,k)*T(n,k) = T(m+n,0) = A117641(m+n).
Sum_{k=0..n} T(n,k)*(4*k+1) = 5^n. - Philippe Deléham, Mar 22 2007
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