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.

Previous Showing 11-15 of 15 results.

A350252 Number of non-alternating patterns of length n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 7, 53, 439, 4121, 43675, 519249, 6867463, 100228877, 1602238783, 27866817297, 524175098299, 10606844137009, 229807953097903, 5308671596791901, 130261745042452855, 3383732450013895721, 92770140175473602755, 2677110186541556215233
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Jan 13 2022

Keywords

Comments

We define a pattern to be a finite sequence covering an initial interval of positive integers. Patterns are counted by A000670 and ranked by A333217.
A sequence is alternating if it is alternately strictly increasing and strictly decreasing, starting with either. For example, the partition (3,2,2,2,1) has no alternating permutations, even though it does have the anti-run permutations (2,3,2,1,2) and (2,1,2,3,2). An alternating pattern is necessarily an anti-run (A005649).
Conjecture: Also the number of non-weakly up/down (or down/up) patterns of length n. For example:
- The a(3) = 7 non-weakly up/down patterns:
(121), (122), (123), (132), (221), (231), (321)
- The a(3) = 7 non-weakly down/up patterns:
(112), (123), (211), (212), (213), (312), (321)
- The a(3) = 7 non-alternating patterns (see example for more):
(111), (112), (122), (123), (211), (221), (321)

Examples

			The a(2) = 1 and a(3) = 7 non-alternating patterns:
  (1,1)  (1,1,1)
         (1,1,2)
         (1,2,2)
         (1,2,3)
         (2,1,1)
         (2,2,1)
         (3,2,1)
The a(4) = 53 non-alternating patterns:
  2112   3124   4123   1112   2134   1234   3112   2113   1123
  2211   3214   4213   1211   2314   1243   3123   2123   1213
  2212   3412   4312   1212   2341   1324   3211   2213   1223
         3421   4321   1221   2413   1342   3212   2311   1231
                       1222   2431   1423   3213   2312   1232
                                     1432   3312   2313   1233
                                            3321   2321   1312
                                                   2331   1321
                                                          1322
                                                          1323
                                                          1332
		

Crossrefs

The unordered version is A122746.
The version for compositions is A345192, ranked by A345168, weak A349053.
The complement is counted by A345194, weak A349058.
The version for factorizations is A348613, complement A348610, weak A350139.
The strict case (permutations) is A348615, complement A001250.
The weak version for partitions is A349061, complement A349060.
The weak version for perms of prime indices is A349797, complement A349056.
The weak version is A350138.
The version for perms of prime indices is A350251, complement A345164.
A000670 = patterns (ranked by A333217).
A003242 = anti-run compositions, complement A261983, ranked by A333489.
A005649 = anti-run patterns, complement A069321.
A019536 = necklace patterns.
A025047/A129852/A129853 = alternating compositions, ranked by A345167.
A226316 = patterns avoiding (1,2,3), weakly A052709, complement A335515.
A345163 = normal partitions w/ alternating permutation, complement A345162.
A345170 = partitions w/ alternating permutation, complement A345165.
A349055 = normal multisets w/ alternating permutation, complement A349050.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    allnorm[n_]:=If[n<=0,{{}},Function[s,Array[Count[s,y_/;y<=#]+1&,n]]/@Subsets[Range[n-1]+1]];
    wigQ[y_]:=Or[Length[y]==0,Length[Split[y]]==Length[y]&& Length[Split[Sign[Differences[y]]]]==Length[y]-1];
    Table[Length[Select[Join@@Permutations/@allnorm[n],!wigQ[#]&]],{n,0,6}]

Formula

a(n) = A000670(n) - A345194(n).

Extensions

Terms a(9) and beyond from Andrew Howroyd, Feb 04 2022

A348609 Numbers with a separable factorization without an alternating permutation.

Original entry on oeis.org

216, 270, 324, 378, 432, 486, 540, 594, 640, 648, 702, 756, 768, 810, 864, 896, 918, 960, 972, 1024, 1026, 1080, 1134, 1152, 1188, 1242, 1280, 1296, 1344, 1350, 1404, 1408, 1458, 1500, 1512, 1536, 1566, 1620, 1664, 1674, 1728, 1750, 1782, 1792, 1836, 1890
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Oct 30 2021

Keywords

Comments

A factorization of n is a weakly increasing sequence of positive integers > 1 with product n.
A multiset is separable if it has a permutation that is an anti-run, meaning there are no adjacent equal parts. Alternatively, a multiset is separable if its greatest multiplicity is greater than the sum of the remaining multiplicities plus one.
A sequence is alternating if it is alternately strictly increasing and strictly decreasing, starting with either. For example, the partition (3,2,2,2,1) has no alternating permutations, even though it does have the anti-run permutations (2,3,2,1,2) and (2,1,2,3,2). Alternating permutations of multisets are a generalization of alternating or up-down permutations of sets.
Note that 216 has separable prime factorization (2*2*2*3*3*3) with an alternating permutation, but the separable factorization (2*3*3*3*4) is has no alternating permutation. See also A345173.

Examples

			The terms and their prime factorizations begin:
  216 = 2*2*2*3*3*3
  270 = 2*3*3*3*5
  324 = 2*2*3*3*3*3
  378 = 2*3*3*3*7
  432 = 2*2*2*2*3*3*3
  486 = 2*3*3*3*3*3
  540 = 2*2*3*3*3*5
  594 = 2*3*3*3*11
  640 = 2*2*2*2*2*2*2*5
  648 = 2*2*2*3*3*3*3
  702 = 2*3*3*3*13
  756 = 2*2*3*3*3*7
  768 = 2*2*2*2*2*2*2*2*3
  810 = 2*3*3*3*3*5
  864 = 2*2*2*2*2*3*3*3
		

Crossrefs

Partitions of this type are counted by A345166, ranked by A345173 (a superset).
Compositions of this type are counted by A345195, ranked by A345169.
A001055 counts factorizations, strict A045778, ordered A074206.
A001250 counts alternating permutations, complement A348615.
A025047 counts alternating compositions, complement A345192, ranked by A345167.
A335434 counts separable factorizations, with twins A348383, complement A333487.
A339846 counts even-length factorizations.
A339890 counts odd-length factorizations.
A345165 counts partitions w/o an alternating permutation, complement A345170.
A347438 counts factorizations with alternating product 1, additive A119620.
A348379 counts factorizations w/ an alternating permutation, complement A348380.
A348610 counts alternating ordered factorizations, complement A348613.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    facs[n_]:=If[n<=1,{{}},Join@@Table[Map[Prepend[#,d]&,Select[facs[n/d],Min@@#>=d&]],{d,Rest[Divisors[n]]}]];
    sepQ[m_]:=Select[Permutations[m],!MatchQ[#,{_,x_,x_,_}]&]!={};
    wigQ[y_]:=Or[Length[y]==0,Length[Split[y]]==Length[y]&&Length[Split[Sign[Differences[y]]]]==Length[y]-1];
    Select[Range[1000],Function[n,Select[facs[n],sepQ[#]&&Select[Permutations[#],wigQ]=={}&]!={}]]

A350138 Number of non-weakly alternating patterns of length n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 0, 2, 32, 338, 3560, 40058, 492664, 6647666, 98210192, 1581844994, 27642067000, 521491848218, 10572345303576, 229332715217954, 5301688511602448, 130152723055769810, 3381930236770946120, 92738693031618794378, 2676532576838728227352
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Dec 24 2021

Keywords

Comments

We define a pattern to be a finite sequence covering an initial interval of positive integers. Patterns are counted by A000670 and ranked by A333217.
We define a sequence to be weakly alternating if it is alternately weakly increasing and weakly decreasing, starting with either.
Conjecture: The directed cases, which count non-weakly up/down or non-weakly down/up patterns, are both equal to the strong case: A350252.

Examples

			The a(4) = 32 patterns:
  (1,1,2,3)  (2,1,1,2)  (3,1,1,2)  (4,1,2,3)
  (1,2,2,1)  (2,1,1,3)  (3,1,2,3)  (4,2,1,3)
  (1,2,3,1)  (2,1,2,3)  (3,1,2,4)  (4,3,1,2)
  (1,2,3,2)  (2,1,3,4)  (3,2,1,1)  (4,3,2,1)
  (1,2,3,3)  (2,3,2,1)  (3,2,1,2)
  (1,2,3,4)  (2,3,3,1)  (3,2,1,3)
  (1,2,4,3)  (2,3,4,1)  (3,2,1,4)
  (1,3,2,1)  (2,4,3,1)  (3,3,2,1)
  (1,3,3,2)             (3,4,2,1)
  (1,3,4,2)
  (1,4,3,2)
		

Crossrefs

The unordered version is A274230, complement A052955.
The strong case of compositions is A345192, ranked by A345168.
The strict case is A348615, complement A001250.
For compositions we have A349053, complement A349052, ranked by A349057.
The complement is counted by A349058.
The version for partitions is A349061, complement A349060.
The version for permutations of prime indices: A349797, complement A349056.
The version for ordered factorizations is A350139, complement A349059.
The strong case is A350252, complement A345194. Also the directed case?
A003242 = Carlitz compositions, complement A261983, ranked by A333489.
A005649 = anti-run patterns, complement A069321.
A025047/A129852/A129853 = alternating compositions, ranked by A345167.
A345163 = normal partitions w/ alternating permutation, complement A345162.
A345170 = partitions w/ alternating permutation, complement A345165.
A349055 = normal multisets w/ alternating permutation, complement A349050.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    allnorm[n_]:=If[n<=0,{{}},Function[s,Array[Count[s,y_/;y<=#]+1&,n]]/@Subsets[Range[n-1]+1]];
    whkQ[y_]:=And@@Table[If[EvenQ[m],y[[m]]<=y[[m+1]],y[[m]]>=y[[m+1]]],{m,1,Length[y]-1}];
    Table[Length[Select[Join@@Permutations/@allnorm[n],!whkQ[#]&&!whkQ[-#]&]],{n,0,6}]
  • PARI
    R(n,k)={my(v=vector(k,i,1), u=vector(n)); for(r=1, n, if(r%2==0, my(s=v[k]); forstep(i=k, 2, -1, v[i] = s - v[i-1]); v[1] = s); for(i=2, k, v[i] += v[i-1]); u[r]=v[k]); u}
    seq(n)= {concat([0], vector(n,i,1) + sum(k=1, n, (vector(n,i,k^i) - 2*R(n, k))*sum(r=k, n, binomial(r, k)*(-1)^(r-k)) ) )} \\ Andrew Howroyd, Jan 13 2024

Formula

a(n) = A000670(n) - A349058(n).

Extensions

a(9) onwards from Andrew Howroyd, Jan 13 2024

A349801 Number of integer partitions of n into three or more parts or into two equal parts.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 1, 3, 4, 8, 11, 18, 25, 37, 50, 71, 94, 128, 168, 223, 288, 376, 480, 617, 781, 991, 1243, 1563, 1945, 2423, 2996, 3704, 4550, 5589, 6826, 8333, 10126, 12293, 14865, 17959, 21618, 25996, 31165, 37318, 44562, 53153, 63239, 75153, 89111, 105535, 124730
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Dec 23 2021

Keywords

Comments

This sequence arose as the following degenerate case. If we define a sequence to be alternating if it is alternately strictly increasing and strictly decreasing, starting with either, then a(n) is the number of non-alternating integer partitions of n. Under this interpretation:
- The non-strict case is A047967, weak A349796, weak complement A349795.
- The complement is counted by A065033(n) = ceiling(n/2) for n > 0.
- These partitions are ranked by A289553 \ {1}, complement A167171 \/ {1}.
- The version for compositions is A345192, ranked by A345168.
- The weak version for compositions is A349053, ranked by A349057.
- The weak version is A349061, complement A349060, ranked by A349794.

Examples

			The a(2) = 1 through a(7) = 11 partitions:
  (11)  (111)  (22)    (221)    (33)      (322)
               (211)   (311)    (222)     (331)
               (1111)  (2111)   (321)     (421)
                       (11111)  (411)     (511)
                                (2211)    (2221)
                                (3111)    (3211)
                                (21111)   (4111)
                                (111111)  (22111)
                                          (31111)
                                          (211111)
                                          (1111111)
		

Crossrefs

A000041 counts partitions, ordered A011782.
A001250 counts alternating permutations, complement A348615.
A004250 counts partitions into three or more parts, strict A347548.
A025047/A025048/A025049 count alternating compositions, ranked by A345167.
A096441 counts weakly alternating 0-appended partitions.
A345165 counts partitions w/ no alternating permutation, complement A345170.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[IntegerPartitions[n],MatchQ[#,{x_,x_}|{,,__}]&]],{n,0,10}]

Formula

a(1) = 0; a(n > 0) = A000041(n) - ceiling(n/2).

A350250 Numbers k such that the k-th composition in standard order is a non-alternating permutation of an initial interval of positive integers.

Original entry on oeis.org

37, 52, 549, 550, 556, 564, 581, 600, 616, 649, 657, 712, 786, 802, 836, 840, 16933, 16934, 16937, 16940, 16946, 16948, 16965, 16977, 16984, 16994, 17000, 17033, 17041, 17092, 17096, 17170, 17186, 17220, 17224, 17445, 17446, 17452, 17460, 17541, 17569, 17584
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Jan 13 2022

Keywords

Comments

A sequence is alternating if it is alternately strictly increasing and strictly decreasing, starting with either.
The k-th composition in standard order (graded reverse-lexicographic, A066099) is obtained by taking the set of positions of 1's in the reversed binary expansion of k, prepending 0, taking first differences, and reversing again. This gives a bijective correspondence between nonnegative integers and integer compositions.

Examples

			The terms and corresponding permutations begin:
     37: (3,2,1)
     52: (1,2,3)
    549: (4,3,2,1)
    550: (4,3,1,2)
    556: (4,2,1,3)
    564: (4,1,2,3)
    581: (3,4,2,1)
    600: (3,2,1,4)
    616: (3,1,2,4)
    649: (2,4,3,1)
    657: (2,3,4,1)
    712: (2,1,3,4)
    786: (1,4,3,2)
    802: (1,3,4,2)
    836: (1,2,4,3)
    840: (1,2,3,4)
  16933: (5,4,3,2,1)
		

Crossrefs

This is the non-alternating case of A333218.
This is the restriction of A345168 to permutations, complement A345167.
These partitions are counted by A348615, complement A001250.
A003242 counts anti-run compositions, patterns A005649.
A025047 counts alternating compositions, directed A025048/A025049.
A345192 counts non-alternating compositions.
A345194 counts alternating patterns, complement A350252.
Statistics of standard compositions:
- Length is A000120.
- Sum is A070939.
- Heinz number is A333219.
- Number of maximal anti-runs is A333381.
- Number of distinct parts is A334028.
Classes of standard compositions:
- Weakly decreasing compositions (partitions) are A114994, strict A333256.
- Weakly increasing compositions (multisets) are A225620, strict A333255.
- Strict compositions are A233564.
- Constant compositions are A272919.
- Anti-run compositions are A333489, complement A348612.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    stc[n_]:=Differences[Prepend[Join@@Position[ Reverse[IntegerDigits[n,2]],1],0]]//Reverse;
    wigQ[y_]:=Or[Length[y]==0, Length[Split[y]]==Length[y] &&Length[Split[Sign[Differences[y]]]]==Length[y]-1];
    Select[Range[0,1000],(Sort[stc[#]]==Range[Length[stc[#]]]&&!wigQ[stc[#]])&]
Previous Showing 11-15 of 15 results.