[go: up one dir, main page]

login

Year-end appeal: Please make a donation to the OEIS Foundation to support ongoing development and maintenance of the OEIS. We are now in our 61st year, we have over 378,000 sequences, and we’ve reached 11,000 citations (which often say “discovered thanks to the OEIS”).

Revision History for A336587 (Bold, blue-underlined text is an addition; faded, red-underlined text is a deletion.)

Showing entries 1-10 | older changes
Smallest nonnegative integer containing the n-th letter of the Hebrew alphabet (in Hebrew using masculine numbers), or -1 if no such integer exists.
(history; published version)
#21 by Michel Marcus at Tue Feb 21 02:10:39 EST 2023
STATUS

reviewed

approved

#20 by Joerg Arndt at Tue Feb 21 02:07:07 EST 2023
STATUS

proposed

reviewed

#19 by Sidney Cadot at Tue Feb 21 01:28:03 EST 2023
STATUS

editing

proposed

#18 by Sidney Cadot at Tue Feb 21 01:27:47 EST 2023
COMMENTS

Final forms of the letters are considered the same as the normal forms. There are no numbers with ז (zayin), , כ (kaf), or צ (tsadi) in their names. ג (gimel) appears only in vocabulary transliterated into Hebrew based on Landon Curt Noll's latin-based power of 1000 naming system and not in everyday vocabulary (hence why a(3) = 10^63).

STATUS

approved

editing

Discussion
Tue Feb 21
01:28
Sidney Cadot: Removed unneccesary instances of the unicode '\u200e' character. The sole Hebrew characters require no such annotation, as they are handled just fine by the Unicode bidirectional algorithm, as laid out in http://unicode.org/reports/tr9/.
#17 by N. J. A. Sloane at Tue Oct 06 02:46:46 EDT 2020
STATUS

proposed

approved

#16 by Ely Golden at Sun Oct 04 22:53:39 EDT 2020
STATUS

editing

proposed

#15 by Ely Golden at Sun Oct 04 22:52:42 EDT 2020
COMMENTS

This sequence assumes the use of the short scale for naming large numbers. It is the same whether or not 10^9 is called "ביליון" (billion) or "מיליארד" (milliard).

Final forms of the letters are considered the same as the normal forms. There are no numbers with ז (zayin)‎, כ‎, (kaf), or צ‎ (tsadi) in their names. ג‎ (gimel) appears only in vocabulary transliterated into Hebrew based on Landon Curt Noll's latin-based power of 1000 naming system and not in everyday vocabulary (hence why a(3) = 10^63).

STATUS

proposed

editing

#14 by Michel Marcus at Tue Sep 08 11:58:14 EDT 2020
STATUS

editing

proposed

Discussion
Sun Oct 04
20:38
Sean A. Irvine: Same comment as per transliteration of Hebrew letters.
#13 by Michel Marcus at Tue Sep 08 11:57:52 EDT 2020
LINKS

Ely Golden, <a href="/A336587/a336587.txt">spellings Spellings for numbers in A336587</a>

STATUS

proposed

editing

#12 by Ely Golden at Tue Sep 08 11:56:08 EDT 2020
STATUS

editing

proposed