Editing 2016: OEIS Submissions
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:Curiously, OEIS does in fact contain an entry that lists "[https://oeis.org/A010734 all nines]" which contains this proposal as a subsequence. | :Curiously, OEIS does in fact contain an entry that lists "[https://oeis.org/A010734 all nines]" which contains this proposal as a subsequence. | ||
;sub[49] - The decimal representation of the bytes in the root password to the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences server | ;sub[49] - The decimal representation of the bytes in the root password to the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences server | ||
β | :This would give any user the password to OEIS. | + | :This would give any user the password to OEIS. {{w|Internet troll|What happens next}} anyone can easily forecast. Perhaps the idea is to hack OEIS on the premise that accepting this sequence will force OEIS staff to populate it. |
;sub[59] (title text) - The submission numbers for my accepted OEIS submissions in chronological order | ;sub[59] (title text) - The submission numbers for my accepted OEIS submissions in chronological order | ||
:This would only be useful to Randall. If all of his submissions have been rejected, this would be an empty set. However, if this submission is accepted, the set would, by definition, include at least one number (except that this would not be known at the time of submission). Thus, as in the Russell Paradox, this set would be out of date as soon as it was accepted, since the set of accepted submission numbers would change at that point. | :This would only be useful to Randall. If all of his submissions have been rejected, this would be an empty set. However, if this submission is accepted, the set would, by definition, include at least one number (except that this would not be known at the time of submission). Thus, as in the Russell Paradox, this set would be out of date as soon as it was accepted, since the set of accepted submission numbers would change at that point. |