Originally posted by: Vaerilis
31
1 - 4 - 7
11 - 15 - 18
(2)1 - (2)4 - (2)7
(3)1 - (3)5 - (3)8
Probably.
Originally posted by: Vaerilis
31
1 - 4 - 7
11 - 15 - 18
(2)1 - (2)4 - (2)7
(3)1 - (3)5 - (3)8
Probably.
Originally posted by: Vaerilis
My next guesses would be: 4; 22; 41; 1111.
Originally posted by: ribbon13
I would have explained upon being correct.
Originally posted by: Vaerilis
31
1 - 4 - 7
11 - 15 - 18
(2)1 - (2)4 - (2)7
(3)1 - (3)5 - (3)8
Probably.
Originally posted by: Otaking
Originally posted by: Vaerilis
31
1 - 4 - 7
11 - 15 - 18
(2)1 - (2)4 - (2)7
(3)1 - (3)5 - (3)8
Probably.
That's amazing. Even though the answer was wrong, I never saw that pattern. :beer:
Originally posted by: ribbon13
a(n) when spelled is the smallest positive integer > a(n-1) with exactly n letters.
%S A084390 1,4,7,11,15,18,21,24,27,73,101,104,107,111,115,118,121,124,127,173,323,
%T A084390 373,1104,1107,1111,1115,1118,1121,1124,1127,1173,1323,1373,3323,3373,
%U A084390 11373,13323,13373,17373,23323,23373,73373,101373,103323,103373,111373
%N A084390 a(n), when spelled in English, is the smallest positive integer > a(n-1) with exactly n letters.
%C A084390 This uses the conventions that "and" is never used, and two-digit numbers are not used before "hundred". The sequence is labeled "finite" because there is no widely accepted naming convention for arbitrarily large numbers. - David Wasserman (wasserma(AT)spawar.navy.mil), Dec 20 2004
%H A084390 Author?, <a href="http://groups.google.com.au/groups?hl=e...3a57%2540posting.google.com%26rnum%3D6">Title?</a>
%H A084390 Author?, <a href="http://groups.google.com.au/groups?hl=e...%252C4%252C7%252C11%252C15%252C18%2522">Title?</a>
%e A084390 a(5) = 7 because 'seven' has 5 letters
Originally posted by: deftron
When I said "very tough math problem"
I should have said ""very tough problem for anyone who knows math"