English

Variations on a Generating-Function Theme: Enumerating Compositions with Parts Avoiding an Arithmetic Sequence

Number Theory 2016-05-10 v2 Combinatorics

Abstract

A \Def{composition} of a positive integer nn is a kk-tuple (\l1,\l2,,\lk)Z>0k(\l_1, \l_2, \dots, \l_k) \in \Z_{> 0}^k such that n=\l1+\l2++\lkn = \l_1 + \l_2 + \dots + \l_k. Our goal is to enumerate those compositions whose parts \l1,\l2,,\lk\l_1, \l_2, \dots, \l_k avoid a fixed arithmetic sequence. When this sequence is given by the even integers (i.e., all parts of the compositions must be odd), it is well known that the number of compositions is given by the Fibonacci sequence. A much more recent theorem says that when the parts are required to avoid all multiples of a given integer kk, the resulting compositions are counted by a sequence given by a Fibonacci-type recursion of depth kk. We extend this result to arbitrary arithmetic sequences. Our main tool is a lemma on generating functions which is no secret among experts but deserves to be more widely known.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1403.0665,
  title  = {Variations on a Generating-Function Theme: Enumerating Compositions with Parts Avoiding an Arithmetic Sequence},
  author = {Matthias Beck and Neville Robbins},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1403.0665},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

7 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T03:19:35.506Z