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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A365918 Number of distinct non-subset-sums of integer partitions of n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 1, 2, 6, 8, 19, 24, 46, 60, 101, 124, 206, 250, 378, 462, 684, 812, 1165, 1380, 1927, 2268, 3108, 3606, 4862, 5648, 7474, 8576, 11307, 12886, 16652, 19050, 24420, 27584, 35225, 39604, 49920, 56370, 70540, 78608, 98419, 109666, 135212, 151176, 185875, 205308
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Sep 23 2023

Keywords

Comments

For an integer partition y of n, we call a positive integer k <= n a non-subset-sum iff there is no submultiset of y summing to k.

Examples

			The a(6) = 19 ways, showing each partition and its non-subset-sums:
       (6): 1,2,3,4,5
      (51): 2,3,4
      (42): 1,3,5
     (411): 3
      (33): 1,2,4,5
     (321):
    (3111):
     (222): 1,3,5
    (2211):
   (21111):
  (111111):
		

Crossrefs

Row sums of A046663, strict A365663.
The zero-full complement (subset-sums) is A304792.
The strict case is A365922.
Weighted row-sums of A365923, rank statistic A325799, complement A365658.
A000041 counts integer partitions, strict A000009.
A126796 counts complete partitions, ranks A325781, strict A188431.
A365543 counts partitions with a submultiset summing to k, strict A365661.
A365924 counts incomplete partitions, ranks A365830, strict A365831.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Total[Length[Complement[Range[n],Total/@Subsets[#]]]&/@IntegerPartitions[n]],{n,10}]
  • Python
    # uses A304792_T
    from sympy import npartitions
    def A365918(n): return (n+1)*npartitions(n)-A304792_T(n,n,(0,),1) # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 25 2023

Formula

a(n) = (n+1)*A000041(n) - A304792(n).

Extensions

a(21)-a(45) from Chai Wah Wu, Sep 25 2023

A364915 Number of integer partitions of n such that no distinct part can be written as a nonnegative linear combination of other distinct parts.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 10, 16, 16, 19, 21, 29, 25, 37, 35, 44, 46, 60, 55, 75, 71, 90, 90, 114, 110, 140, 138, 167, 163, 217, 201, 248, 241, 298, 303, 359, 355, 425, 422, 520, 496, 594, 603, 715, 706, 834, 826, 968, 972, 1153, 1147, 1334, 1315, 1530
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 22 2023

Keywords

Examples

			The a(1) = 1 through a(10) = 8 partitions (A=10):
  1  2   3    4     5      6       7        8         9          A
     11  111  22    32     33      43       44        54         55
              1111  11111  222     52       53        72         64
                           111111  322      332       333        73
                                   1111111  2222      522        433
                                            11111111  3222       3322
                                                      111111111  22222
                                                                 1111111111
The partition (5,4,3) has no part that can be written as a nonnegative linear combination of the others, so is counted under a(12).
The partition (6,4,3,2) has 6=4+2, or 6=3+3, or 6=2+2+2, or 4=2+2, so is not counted under a(15).
		

Crossrefs

For sums instead of combinations we have A237667, binary A236912.
For subsets instead of partitions we have A326083, complement A364914.
The strict case is A364350.
The complement is A365068, strict A364839.
The positive case is A365072, strict A365006.
A000041 counts integer partitions, strict A000009.
A007865 counts binary sum-free sets w/ re-usable parts, complement A093971.
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A116861 and A364916 count linear combinations of strict partitions.
A364912 counts linear combinations of partitions of k.

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[IntegerPartitions[n], Function[ptn,!Or@@Table[combs[ptn[[k]],Delete[ptn,k]]!={}, {k,Length[ptn]}]]@*Union]], {n,0,15}]
  • Python
    from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
    def A364915(n):
        if n <= 1: return 1
        alist, c = [set(tuple(sorted(set(p))) for p in partitions(i)) for i in range(n)], 1
        for p in partitions(n,k=n-1):
            s = set(p)
            if not any(set(t).issubset(s-{q}) for q in s for t in alist[q]):
                c += 1
        return c # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 23 2023

Formula

a(n) = A000041(n) - A365068(n).

Extensions

a(37)-a(59) from Chai Wah Wu, Sep 25 2023

A365376 Number of subsets of {1..n} with a subset summing to n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 2, 5, 10, 23, 47, 102, 207, 440, 890, 1847, 3730, 7648, 15400, 31332, 62922, 127234, 255374, 514269, 1030809, 2071344, 4148707, 8321937, 16660755, 33384685, 66812942, 133789638, 267685113, 535784667, 1071878216, 2144762139, 4290261840, 8583175092, 17168208940, 34342860713
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Sep 08 2023

Keywords

Examples

			The a(1) = 1 through a(4) = 10 sets:
  {1}  {2}    {3}      {4}
       {1,2}  {1,2}    {1,3}
              {1,3}    {1,4}
              {2,3}    {2,4}
              {1,2,3}  {3,4}
                       {1,2,3}
                       {1,2,4}
                       {1,3,4}
                       {2,3,4}
                       {1,2,3,4}
		

Crossrefs

The case containing n is counted by A131577.
The version with re-usable parts is A365073.
The complement is counted by A365377.
The complement w/ re-usable parts is A365380.
Main diagonal of A365381.
A000009 counts sets summing to n, multisets A000041.
A000124 counts distinct possible sums of subsets of {1..n}.
A124506 appears to count combination-free subsets, differences of A326083.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions, complement A364839.
A365046 counts combination-full subsets, differences of A364914.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[Subsets[Range[n]],MemberQ[Total/@Subsets[#],n]&]],{n,0,10}]
  • PARI
    isok(s, n) = forsubset(#s, ss, if (vecsum(vector(#ss, k, s[ss[k]])) == n, return(1)));
    a(n) = my(nb=0); forsubset(n, s, if (isok(s, n), nb++)); nb; \\ Michel Marcus, Sep 09 2023
    
  • Python
    from itertools import combinations, chain
    from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
    def A365376(n):
        if n == 0: return 1
        nset = set(range(1,n+1))
        s, c = [set(p) for p in partitions(n,m=n,k=n) if max(p.values(),default=1) == 1], 1
        for a in chain.from_iterable(combinations(nset,m) for m in range(2,n+1)):
            if sum(a) >= n:
                aset = set(a)
                for p in s:
                    if p.issubset(aset):
                        c += 1
                        break
        return c # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 09 2023

Formula

a(n) = 2^n-A365377(n). - Chai Wah Wu, Sep 09 2023

Extensions

a(16)-a(25) from Michel Marcus, Sep 09 2023
a(26)-a(32) from Chai Wah Wu, Sep 09 2023
a(33)-a(35) from Chai Wah Wu, Sep 10 2023

A364461 Positive integers such that if prime(a)*prime(b) is a divisor, prime(a+b) is not.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 61, 62, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 71, 73, 74, 75, 76
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Jul 27 2023

Keywords

Comments

Also Heinz numbers of a type of sum-free partitions not allowing re-used parts, counted by A236912.

Examples

			The prime indices of 198 are {1,2,2,5}, which is sum-free even though it is not knapsack (A299702, A299729), so 198 is in the sequence.
		

Crossrefs

Subsets of this type are counted by A085489, with re-usable parts A007865.
Subsets not of this type are counted by A093971, w/ re-usable parts A088809.
Partitions of this type are counted by A236912.
Allowing parts to be re-used gives A364347, counted by A364345.
The complement allowing parts to be re-used is A364348, counted by A363225.
The non-binary version allowing re-used parts is counted by A364350.
The complement is A364462, counted by A237113.
The non-binary version is A364531, counted by A237667, complement A364532.
A001222 counts prime indices.
A108917 counts knapsack partitions, ranks A299702.
A112798 lists prime indices, sum A056239.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    prix[n_]:=If[n==1,{}, Flatten[Cases[FactorInteger[n], {p_,k_}:>Table[PrimePi[p],{k}]]]];
    Select[Range[100],Intersection[prix[#], Total/@Subsets[prix[#],{2}]]=={}&]

A364462 Positive integers having a divisor of the form prime(a)*prime(b) such that prime(a+b) is also a divisor.

Original entry on oeis.org

12, 24, 30, 36, 48, 60, 63, 70, 72, 84, 90, 96, 108, 120, 126, 132, 140, 144, 150, 154, 156, 165, 168, 180, 189, 192, 204, 210, 216, 228, 240, 252, 264, 270, 273, 276, 280, 286, 288, 300, 308, 312, 315, 324, 325, 330, 336, 348, 350, 360, 372, 378, 384, 390
Offset: 1

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Jul 29 2023

Keywords

Comments

Also Heinz numbers of a type of sum-full partitions not allowing re-used parts, counted by A237113.
No partitions of this type are knapsack (A299702, A299729).
All multiples of terms are terms. - Robert Israel, Aug 30 2023

Examples

			The terms together with their prime indices begin:
   12: {1,1,2}
   24: {1,1,1,2}
   30: {1,2,3}
   36: {1,1,2,2}
   48: {1,1,1,1,2}
   60: {1,1,2,3}
   63: {2,2,4}
   70: {1,3,4}
   72: {1,1,1,2,2}
   84: {1,1,2,4}
   90: {1,2,2,3}
   96: {1,1,1,1,1,2}
  108: {1,1,2,2,2}
  120: {1,1,1,2,3}
  126: {1,2,2,4}
  132: {1,1,2,5}
  140: {1,1,3,4}
  144: {1,1,1,1,2,2}
		

Crossrefs

Subsets not of this type are counted by A085489, w/ re-usable parts A007865.
Subsets of this type are counted by A088809, with re-usable parts A093971.
Partitions not of this type are counted by A236912.
Partitions of this type are counted by A237113.
Subset of A299729.
The complement with re-usable parts is A364347, counted by A364345.
With re-usable parts we have A364348, counted by A363225 (strict A363226).
The complement is A364461.
The non-binary complement is A364531, counted by A237667.
The non-binary version is A364532, see also A364350.
A001222 counts prime indices.
A108917 counts knapsack partitions, ranks A299702.
A112798 lists prime indices, sum A056239.

Programs

  • Maple
    filter:= proc(n) local F, i,j,m;
      F:= map(t -> `if`(t[2]>=2, numtheory:-pi(t[1])$2, numtheory:-pi(t[1])), ifactors(n)[2]);
      for i from 1 to nops(F)-1 do for j from 1 to i-1 do
        if member(F[i]+F[j],F) then return true fi
      od od;
      false
    end proc:
    select(filter, [$1..1000]); # Robert Israel, Aug 30 2023
  • Mathematica
    prix[n_]:=If[n==1,{},Flatten[Cases[FactorInteger[n],{p_,k_}:>Table[PrimePi[p],{k}]]]];
    Select[Range[100],Intersection[prix[#], Total/@Subsets[prix[#],{2}]]!={}&]

A364911 Triangle read by rows where T(n,k) is the number of integer partitions with sum <= n and with distinct parts summing to k.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 3, 1, 2, 1, 4, 2, 3, 2, 1, 5, 2, 5, 3, 3, 1, 6, 3, 8, 4, 4, 4, 1, 7, 3, 11, 6, 6, 6, 5, 1, 8, 4, 14, 9, 8, 10, 7, 6, 1, 9, 4, 19, 11, 11, 14, 11, 9, 8, 1, 10, 5, 23, 14, 15, 21, 15, 14, 11, 10, 1, 11, 5, 28, 17, 19, 28, 22, 20, 17, 15, 12
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 27 2023

Keywords

Comments

Also the number of ways to write any number up to n as a positive linear combination of a strict integer partition of k.

Examples

			Triangle begins:
  1
  1  1
  1  2  1
  1  3  1  2
  1  4  2  3  2
  1  5  2  5  3  3
  1  6  3  8  4  4  4
  1  7  3 11  6  6  6  5
  1  8  4 14  9  8 10  7  6
  1  9  4 19 11 11 14 11  9  8
  1 10  5 23 14 15 21 15 14 11 10
  1 11  5 28 17 19 28 22 20 17 15 12
  1 12  6 34 21 22 40 28 28 24 24 17 15
  1 13  6 40 25 27 50 38 37 34 35 27 22 18
  1 14  7 46 29 32 65 49 50 43 51 38 35 26 22
  1 15  7 54 33 38 79 62 63 59 68 55 50 41 32 27
Row n = 5 counts the following partitions:
    .    1           2     3         4       5
         1+1         2+2   1+2       1+3     1+4
         1+1+1             1+1+2     1+1+3   2+3
         1+1+1+1           1+1+1+2
         1+1+1+1+1         1+2+2
Row n = 5 counts the following positive linear combinations:
  .  1*1  1*2  1*3      1*4      1*5
     2*1  2*2  1*2+1*1  1*3+1*1  1*3+1*2
     3*1       1*2+2*1  1*3+2*1  1*4+1*1
     4*1       1*2+3*1
     5*1       2*2+1*1
		

Crossrefs

Column n = k is A000009.
Column k = 0 is A000012.
Column k = 1 is A000027.
Row sums are A000070.
Column k = 2 is A008619.
Columns are partial sums of columns of A116861.
Column k = 3 appears to be the partial sums of A137719.
Diagonal n = 2k is A364910.
A000041 counts integer partitions, strict A000009.
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A114638 counts partitions where (length) = (sum of distinct parts).
A116608 counts partitions by number of distinct parts.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions, complement A364839.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[Array[IntegerPartitions,n+1,0,Join],Total[Union[#]]==k&]],{n,0,9},{k,0,n}]
  • PARI
    T(n)={[Vecrev(p) | p<-Vec(prod(k=1, n, 1 - y^k + y^k/(1 - x^k), 1/(1 - x) + O(x*x^n)))]}
    { my(A=T(10)); for(n=1, #A, print(A[n])) } \\ Andrew Howroyd, Jan 11 2024

Formula

G.f.: A(x,y) = (1/(1 - x)) * Product_{k>=1} (1 - y^k + y^k/(1 - x^k)). - Andrew Howroyd, Jan 11 2024

A364910 Number of integer partitions of 2n whose distinct parts sum to n.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 3, 3, 4, 12, 11, 19, 23, 54, 55, 103, 115, 178, 289, 389, 507, 757, 970, 1343, 2033, 2579, 3481, 4840, 6312, 8317, 10998, 15459, 19334, 26368, 33480, 44709, 56838, 74878, 93369, 128109, 157024, 206471, 258357, 338085, 417530, 544263, 669388, 859570, 1082758, 1367068
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 16 2023

Keywords

Comments

Also the number of ways to write n as a nonnegative linear combination of the parts of a strict integer partition of n.

Examples

			The a(0) = 1 through a(7) = 11 partitions:
  ()  (11)  (22)  (33)     (44)      (55)       (66)         (77)
                  (2211)   (3311)    (3322)     (4422)       (4433)
                  (21111)  (311111)  (4411)     (5511)       (5522)
                                     (4111111)  (33321)      (6611)
                                                (42222)      (442211)
                                                (322221)     (4222211)
                                                (332211)     (4421111)
                                                (3222111)    (42221111)
                                                (3321111)    (422111111)
                                                (32211111)   (611111111)
                                                (51111111)   (4211111111)
                                                (321111111)
The a(0) = 1 through a(7) = 11 linear combinations:
  0  1*1  1*2  1*3      1*4      1*5      1*6          1*7
               0*2+3*1  0*3+4*1  0*4+5*1  0*4+3*2      0*6+7*1
               1*2+1*1  1*3+1*1  1*3+1*2  0*5+6*1      1*4+1*3
                                 1*4+1*1  1*4+1*2      1*5+1*2
                                          1*5+1*1      1*6+1*1
                                          0*3+0*2+6*1  0*4+0*2+7*1
                                          0*3+1*2+4*1  0*4+1*2+5*1
                                          0*3+2*2+2*1  0*4+2*2+3*1
                                          0*3+3*2+0*1  0*4+3*2+1*1
                                          1*3+0*2+3*1  1*4+0*2+3*1
                                          1*3+1*2+1*1  1*4+1*2+1*1
                                          2*3+0*2+0*1
		

Crossrefs

The case with no zero coefficients is A000009.
Central diagonal of A116861.
A version based on Heinz numbers is A364906.
Using all partitions (not just strict) we get A364907.
The version for compositions is A364908, strict A364909.
Main diagonal of A364916.
Using strict partitions of any number from 1 to n gives A365002.
These partitions have ranks A365003.
A000041 counts integer partitions, strict A000009.
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A323092 counts double-free partitions, ranks A320340.

Programs

  • Mathematica
    Table[Length[Select[IntegerPartitions[2n],Total[Union[#]]==n&]],{n,0,15}]
  • PARI
    a(n) = {my(res = 0); forpart(p = 2*n,s = Set(p); if(vecsum(s) == n, res++)); res} \\ David A. Corneth, Aug 20 2023
    
  • Python
    from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
    def A364910(n): return sum(1 for d in partitions(n<<1,k=n) if sum(set(d))==n) # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 13 2023

Formula

a(n) = A116861(2n,n).
a(n) = A364916(n,n).

Extensions

More terms from David A. Corneth, Aug 20 2023

A365043 Number of subsets of {1..n} whose greatest element can be written as a (strictly) positive linear combination of the others.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 1, 3, 7, 12, 21, 32, 49, 70, 99, 135, 185, 245, 323, 418, 541, 688, 873, 1094, 1368, 1693, 2092, 2564, 3138, 3810, 4620, 5565, 6696, 8012, 9569, 11381, 13518, 15980, 18872, 22194, 26075, 30535, 35711, 41627, 48473, 56290, 65283, 75533, 87298, 100631, 115911, 133219
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 25 2023

Keywords

Comments

Sets of this type may be called "positive combination-full".
Also subsets of {1..n} such that some element can be written as a (strictly) positive linear combination of the others.

Examples

			The subset S = {3,4,9} has 9 = 3*3 + 0*4, but this is not strictly positive, so S is not counted under a(9).
The subset S = {3,4,10} has 10 = 2*3 + 1*4, so S is counted under a(10).
The a(0) = 0 through a(5) = 12 subsets:
  .  .  {1,2}  {1,2}    {1,2}    {1,2}
               {1,3}    {1,3}    {1,3}
               {1,2,3}  {1,4}    {1,4}
                        {2,4}    {1,5}
                        {1,2,3}  {2,4}
                        {1,2,4}  {1,2,3}
                        {1,3,4}  {1,2,4}
                                 {1,2,5}
                                 {1,3,4}
                                 {1,3,5}
                                 {1,4,5}
                                 {2,3,5}
		

Crossrefs

The binary complement is A007865, first differences A288728.
The binary version is A093971, first differences A365070.
The nonnegative complement is A326083, first differences A124506.
The nonnegative version is A364914, first differences A365046.
First differences are A365042.
The complement is counted by A365044, first differences A365045.
Without re-usable parts we have A364534, first differences A365069.
A085489 and A364755 count subsets with no sum of two distinct elements.
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[Rest[Subsets[Range[n]]],combp[Last[#],Union[Most[#]]]!={}&]],{n,0,10}]
  • Python
    from itertools import combinations
    from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
    def A365043(n):
        mlist = tuple({tuple(sorted(p.keys())) for p in partitions(m,k=m-1)} for m in range(1,n+1))
        return sum(1 for k in range(2,n+1) for w in combinations(range(1,n+1),k) if w[:-1] in mlist[w[-1]-1]) # Chai Wah Wu, Nov 20 2023

Formula

a(n) = 2^n - A365044(n).

Extensions

a(15)-a(35) from Chai Wah Wu, Nov 20 2023
More terms from Bert Dobbelaere, Apr 28 2025

A365312 Number of strict integer partitions with sum <= n that cannot be linearly combined using nonnegative coefficients to obtain n.

Original entry on oeis.org

0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 3, 2, 6, 4, 8, 7, 16, 6, 24, 17, 24, 20, 46, 22, 62, 31, 63, 57, 106, 35, 122, 90, 137, 88, 212, 74, 262, 134, 267, 206, 345, 121, 476, 294, 484, 232, 698, 242, 837, 389, 763, 571, 1185, 318, 1327, 634, 1392, 727, 1927, 640, 2056, 827, 2233, 1328
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Sep 05 2023

Keywords

Examples

			The strict partition (7,3,2) has 19 = 1*7 + 2*3 + 3*2 so is not counted under a(19).
The strict partition (9,6,3) cannot be linearly combined to obtain 19, so is counted under a(19).
The a(0) = 0 through a(11) = 16 strict partitions:
  .  .  .  (2)  (3)  (2)  (4)  (2)    (3)  (2)    (3)    (2)
                     (3)  (5)  (3)    (5)  (4)    (4)    (3)
                     (4)       (4)    (6)  (5)    (6)    (4)
                               (5)    (7)  (6)    (7)    (5)
                               (6)         (7)    (8)    (6)
                               (4,2)       (8)    (9)    (7)
                                           (4,2)  (6,3)  (8)
                                           (6,2)         (9)
                                                         (10)
                                                         (4,2)
                                                         (5,4)
                                                         (6,2)
                                                         (6,3)
                                                         (6,4)
                                                         (7,3)
                                                         (8,2)
		

Crossrefs

The complement for positive coefficients is counted by A088314.
For positive coefficients we have A088528.
The complement is counted by A365311.
For non-strict partitions we have A365378, complement A365379.
The version for subsets is A365380, complement A365073.
A000041 counts integer partitions, strict A000009.
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A116861 and A364916 count linear combinations of strict partitions.
A364350 counts combination-free strict partitions, non-strict A364915.
A364839 counts combination-full strict partitions, non-strict A364913.

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[Select[Join@@Array[IntegerPartitions,n], UnsameQ@@#&],combs[n,#]=={}&]],{n,0,10}]
  • Python
    from math import isqrt
    from sympy.utilities.iterables import partitions
    def A365312(n):
        a = {tuple(sorted(set(p))) for p in partitions(n)}
        return sum(1 for m in range(1,n+1) for b in partitions(m,m=isqrt(1+(n<<3))>>1) if max(b.values()) == 1 and not any(set(d).issubset(set(b)) for d in a)) # Chai Wah Wu, Sep 13 2023

Extensions

a(26)-a(58) from Chai Wah Wu, Sep 13 2023

A364533 Number of strict integer partitions of n containing the sum of no pair of distinct parts. A variation of sum-free strict partitions.

Original entry on oeis.org

1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 5, 5, 8, 7, 11, 11, 15, 15, 21, 22, 28, 32, 38, 40, 51, 55, 65, 74, 83, 94, 111, 119, 136, 160, 174, 196, 222, 252, 273, 315, 341, 391, 425, 477, 518, 602, 636, 719, 782, 886, 944, 1073, 1140, 1302, 1380, 1553, 1651, 1888, 1995, 2224, 2370
Offset: 0

Views

Author

Gus Wiseman, Aug 02 2023

Keywords

Examples

			The a(1) = 1 through a(12) = 11 partitions (A..C = 10..12):
  1   2   3    4    5    6    7     8     9     A     B     C
          21   31   32   42   43    53    54    64    65    75
                    41   51   52    62    63    73    74    84
                              61    71    72    82    83    93
                              421   521   81    91    92    A2
                                          432   631   A1    B1
                                          531   721   542   543
                                          621         632   732
                                                      641   741
                                                      731   831
                                                      821   921
		

Crossrefs

For subsets of {1..n} we have A085489, complement A088809.
The non-strict version is A236912, complement A237113, ranked by A364461.
Allowing re-used parts gives A364346.
The non-binary version is A364349, non-strict A237667 (complement A237668).
The linear combination-free version is A364350.
The complement in strict partitions is A364670, w/ re-used parts A363226.
A000041 counts integer partitions, strict A000009.
A008284 counts partitions by length, strict A008289.
A108917 counts knapsack partitions, strict A275972.
A151897 counts sum-free subsets, complement A364534.
A323092 counts double-free partitions, ranks A320340.

Programs

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