| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 248.1 |  | SPRITE::OSMAN |  | Mon Apr 01 1985 11:20 | 4 | 
|  | Hint:
	There are exactly 24 numbers in the whole sequence.
 | 
| 248.2 |  | LATOUR::JMUNZER |  | Tue Apr 02 1985 17:07 | 8 | 
|  | The problem gets easier when the numbers in the sequence are multiplied by 3:
	0123  0132  0213  0231  0312  0321 ...
	... 3102  3120  3201  3210
So the sequence is the set of decimal numbers which are permutations of
{0, 1, 2, 3}, divided by three.
 | 
| 248.3 |  | SPRITE::OSMAN |  | Wed Apr 03 1985 11:06 | 7 | 
|  | Congratulations.  That's it !
I'm kind of curious whether nobody else figured it out until my hint, OR
if some people did but thought it was so simple they'd wait and give
others a chance, OR people found the problem unmotivating to work on.
Thanks for responding.
 | 
| 248.4 |  | LATOUR::JMUNZER |  | Wed Apr 03 1985 12:37 | 5 | 
|  | Well I needed the hint.  The differences (in decimal: 3, 27, 6, 27, ...)
suggested some sort of counting in some radix, but it took your hint (4!)
to focus the search.
Thank you for the problem.
 | 
| 248.5 |  | FUTBAL::GILBERT |  | Wed Apr 03 1985 19:43 | 1 | 
|  | I'd also persued the radix approach, with no success.
 |