[seqfan] Re: Dumb, language, base dependant department

Eric Angelini Eric.Angelini at kntv.be
Sat Sep 13 12:32:24 CEST 2014


If we drop the "no integer must be repeated", we get the self-describing
(vowels/consonants chunks) sequence T:

T=ONE, ONE, TWO, ONE, ONE, TWO, TWO, ONE, TWO, ONE, ONE, TWO,...

T = 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2, 2, 1, 2, 1, 1, 2,...

Will T show a repeating pattern at some point? In French yes:

F1=UN, UN, UN, UN,...
F2=UN, DEUX, DEUX, DEUX, DEUX,...
F3=UN, TROIS, DEUX, DEUX, DEUX, DEUX,...

A short explanation for F3:

U          1-chunk (vowel)

N TR          3-chunk (consonants)

OI          2-chunk (vowel)

S D          2-chunk (consonant)

EU          2-chunk (vowel)

X D          2-chunk (consonant)

EU          2-chunk (vowel)

X D...          2-chunk (consonant)

Best,
É.

Catapulté de mon aPhone

> Le 13 sept. 2014 à 00:15, "Eric Angelini" <Eric.Angelini at kntv.be> a écrit :
> 
> Hello SeqFans,
> 
> Integers ending either with a vowel or with a consonant (in English), are separated in chunks. 
> The sizes of the said chunks are given by the sequence S itself. 
> S is a permutation of the integers > 0 and was extended with the smallest available integer not yet present in S.
> 
> S=1,4,6,7,8,2,3,5,9,12,20,10,11,13,14,15,16,17,21,22,23,25,29,30,31,32,18,19,33,35,39,24,26,27,28,34,...
> [...]


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