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Revision History for A343633

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Showing entries 1-10 | older changes
Z-coordinate of the points following the 3D spiral defined in A343630.
(history; published version)
#12 by Alois P. Heinz at Wed Jun 01 16:59:49 EDT 2022
STATUS

proposed

approved

#11 by Eric Rowland at Wed Jun 01 16:57:25 EDT 2022
STATUS

editing

proposed

#10 by Eric Rowland at Wed Jun 01 16:57:24 EDT 2022
COMMENTS

Sequence A3436443 A343643 is the analog for the square spiral variant A343640.

STATUS

approved

editing

#9 by N. J. A. Sloane at Sat May 01 21:53:51 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

approved

#8 by N. J. A. Sloane at Sat May 01 21:53:48 EDT 2021
COMMENTS

Sequence A3436443 is the analogue analog for the square spiral variant A343640.

STATUS

proposed

editing

#7 by Wesley Ivan Hurt at Thu Apr 29 11:32:47 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

proposed

Discussion
Sat May 01
18:30
M. F. Hasler: I found various sources saying s.th. like: "The spellings are largely interchangeable, though analog is usually used in relation to electronics, while analogue is often used in the sense something that bears analogy to something else."
#6 by Wesley Ivan Hurt at Thu Apr 29 11:32:44 EDT 2021
COMMENTS

Sequences A343631 and A343632 give the x and y -coordinates.

STATUS

proposed

editing

#5 by M. F. Hasler at Thu Apr 29 10:51:31 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

proposed

Discussion
Thu Apr 29
11:35
Robert C. Lyons: I would change "analogue" to "analog", because "analog" is much more prevalent in the OEIS. There are 300+ sequence names that contain "analog", and zero that contain "analogue". Also, when searching the OEIS for "analogue" vs "analog", there are ten times as many matches for "analog".
#4 by M. F. Hasler at Thu Apr 29 10:44:08 EDT 2021
COMMENTS

Sequence A3436443 is the analogon analogue for the square spiral variant A343640.

STATUS

proposed

editing

Discussion
Thu Apr 29
10:51
M. F. Hasler: If even you don't like the literary Greek style, I'll change to modern English... :-)
#3 by M. F. Hasler at Wed Apr 28 19:59:37 EDT 2021
STATUS

editing

proposed

Discussion
Thu Apr 29
00:25
Jon E. Schoenfield: What's an "analogon"?
10:39
M. F. Hasler: Etymology	:
Ancient Greek ἀνάλογος (análogos).

Noun	:
analogon (plural analoga or analogons)

An analogue. quotation:
1853, Laurens Perseus Hickok, A System of Moral Science (page 58):
The rectilineal as opposed to curvature is an analogon of worthiness as opposed to happiness; as opposed to obliquity, it is an analogon of equity as opposed to partiality _____ I vaguely remember that Neil didn't like "analog", so I try to be creative and change.