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I observe that there already exist the Moser-de Bruijn sequence (A000695 and A063010), an analog of Moser's worm constant (A247553), and the Moser-Newman sum sequence and its analog (A360737 and A005599).
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On Thu, Jan 22, 2026 at 3:40 PM Geoffrey Caveney <geoffre...@gmail.com> wrote:I observe that there already exist the Moser-de Bruijn sequence (A000695 and A063010), an analog of Moser's worm constant (A247553), and the Moser-Newman sum sequence and its analog (A360737 and A005599).
If I would vote a better name for A000792, it would be "After a(0) = 1, numbers of the form 3^k, 2*3^k, 4*3^k." (which is now the first comment. Or we could append it as an alt-definition to the name-field, after a semicolon).
In general, I dislike the way how most of the "higher mathematics" is peppered with the surnames of long dead people, (...)
many live a materially poor life, so awarded even a posthumous acknowledgement of all the sweat and toil they expended
But... sometimes it makes for hard reading, of the topic which is hard enough even without any jargon.
On Thu, Jan 22, 2026 at 4:40 AM Juan Arias de Reyna <ariasder...@gmail.com> wrote:
(...) I frequently deal in my papers with A000792. I want to give a name to this sequence.
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I'm also very much frowning upon introducing new names that don't already exist in literature.There are a few cases where names or terminology were invented by the author of a sequence, and then popularized on OEIS in more and more sequences referring to the first one, and then it looks as if that was standard terminology, although it is only used in the OEIS, and only by one single author.
- Maximilian
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Another idea for giving sequences easy-to-reference names would be to give “core” sequences an additional “C-number” starting with C001, as well an “A-number”. That would be a lot more recognizable than a 6-digit A-number. Are there more than 1000 core sequences?— David desJardins
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$ find seq -name "*.seq" | xargs grep -P '^%K A\d\d\d\d\d\d .*\bcore\b' | wc -l
184
$
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Yet another idea, which people may or may not like, is to give core sequences mnemonic names. E.g., A000040 could be CPRIMES.
Another idea for giving sequences easy-to-reference names would be to give “core” sequences an additional “C-number” starting with C001, as well an “A-number”. That would be a lot more recognizable than a 6-digit A-number. Are there more than 1000 core sequences?
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