AbstractOne basic activity in combinatorics is to establish combinatorial identities by so-called ‘bijective proofs,’ which consists in constructing explicit bijections between two types of the combinatorial objects under consideration.We show how such bijective proofs can be established in a systematic way from the ‘lattice properties’ of partition ideals, and how the desired bijections are computed by means of multiset rewriting, for a variety of combinatorial problems involving partitions. In particular, we fully characterizes all equinumerous partition ideals with ‘disjointly supported’ complements. This geometrical characterization is proved to automatically provide the desired bijection between partition ideals but in terms of the min...
AbstractA bijection is presented between (1): partitions with conditions fj+fj+1≤k−1 and f1≤i−1, whe...
In 1748, Euler published his Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum. Chapter 16 of this work is the firs...
AbstractLet Πs(n) denote the set of partitions of the integer n into exactly s parts, and Πs(2)(n) t...
AbstractOne basic activity in combinatorics is to establish combinatorial identities by so-called ‘b...
AbstractStarting with Euler's bijection between the partitions into odd parts and the partitions int...
AbstractStarting with Euler's bijection between the partitions into odd parts and the partitions int...
Andrews and Olsson [2] have recently proved a general partition identity a special case of which pro...
For each positive integer n, we construct a bijection between the odd partitions of n and the distin...
AbstractIn (Bessenrodt, 1991) a combinatorial proof of a refinement of the Andrews-Olsson partition ...
AbstractThe theorem “ the number of partitions of a positive integer n into distinct odd parts equal...
In our previous paper (J. Comb. Theory Ser. A 120(1):28–38, 2013), we determined a unified combinato...
AbstractA 1-??? correspondence is established between partitions of a positive integer n of the form...
AbstractIt follows from the work of Andrews and Bressoud that fort⩽1, the number of partitions ofnwi...
In this paper we give combinatorial proofs for two partition identities. The first one solves a rece...
AbstractIn this paper we give a bijection between the partitions of n with parts congruent to 1 or 4...
AbstractA bijection is presented between (1): partitions with conditions fj+fj+1≤k−1 and f1≤i−1, whe...
In 1748, Euler published his Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum. Chapter 16 of this work is the firs...
AbstractLet Πs(n) denote the set of partitions of the integer n into exactly s parts, and Πs(2)(n) t...
AbstractOne basic activity in combinatorics is to establish combinatorial identities by so-called ‘b...
AbstractStarting with Euler's bijection between the partitions into odd parts and the partitions int...
AbstractStarting with Euler's bijection between the partitions into odd parts and the partitions int...
Andrews and Olsson [2] have recently proved a general partition identity a special case of which pro...
For each positive integer n, we construct a bijection between the odd partitions of n and the distin...
AbstractIn (Bessenrodt, 1991) a combinatorial proof of a refinement of the Andrews-Olsson partition ...
AbstractThe theorem “ the number of partitions of a positive integer n into distinct odd parts equal...
In our previous paper (J. Comb. Theory Ser. A 120(1):28–38, 2013), we determined a unified combinato...
AbstractA 1-??? correspondence is established between partitions of a positive integer n of the form...
AbstractIt follows from the work of Andrews and Bressoud that fort⩽1, the number of partitions ofnwi...
In this paper we give combinatorial proofs for two partition identities. The first one solves a rece...
AbstractIn this paper we give a bijection between the partitions of n with parts congruent to 1 or 4...
AbstractA bijection is presented between (1): partitions with conditions fj+fj+1≤k−1 and f1≤i−1, whe...
In 1748, Euler published his Introductio in Analysin Infinitorum. Chapter 16 of this work is the firs...
AbstractLet Πs(n) denote the set of partitions of the integer n into exactly s parts, and Πs(2)(n) t...