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===Ascents, descents, runs, exceedances, records=== {{anchor|Descents}} An ''ascent'' of a permutation ''Ο'' of ''n'' is any position ''i'' < ''n'' where the following value is bigger than the current one. That is, ''i'' is an ascent if <math>\sigma(i)<\sigma(i{+}1)</math>. For example, the permutation 3452167 has ascents (at positions) 1, 2, 5, and 6. Similarly, a ''descent'' is a position ''i'' < ''n'' with <math>\sigma(i)>\sigma(i{+}1)</math>, so every ''i'' with <math>1 \leq i<n</math> is either an ascent or a descent. An ''ascending run'' of a permutation is a nonempty increasing contiguous subsequence that cannot be extended at either end; it corresponds to a maximal sequence of successive ascents (the latter may be empty: between two successive descents there is still an ascending run of length 1). By contrast an ''increasing subsequence'' of a permutation is not necessarily contiguous: it is an increasing sequence obtained by omitting some of the values of the one-line notation. For example, the permutation 2453167 has the ascending runs 245, 3, and 167, while it has an increasing subsequence 2367. If a permutation has ''k'' β 1 descents, then it must be the union of ''k'' ascending runs.{{sfn|BΓ³na|2004|p=4f}} The number of permutations of ''n'' with ''k'' ascents is (by definition) the [[Eulerian number]] <math>\textstyle\left\langle{n\atop k}\right\rangle</math>; this is also the number of permutations of ''n'' with ''k'' descents. Some authors however define the Eulerian number <math>\textstyle\left\langle{n\atop k}\right\rangle</math> as the number of permutations with ''k'' ascending runs, which corresponds to {{math|''k'' β 1}} descents.{{sfn|Bona|2012|pages=4β5}} An exceedance of a permutation ''Ο''<sub>1</sub>''Ο''<sub>2</sub>...''Ο''<sub>''n''</sub> is an index ''j'' such that {{math|''Ο''<sub>''j''</sub> > ''j''}}. If the inequality is not strict (that is, {{math|''Ο''<sub>''j''</sub> β₯ ''j''}}), then ''j'' is called a ''weak exceedance''. The number of ''n''-permutations with ''k'' exceedances coincides with the number of ''n''-permutations with ''k'' descents.{{sfn|Bona|2012|page=25}} A ''record'' or ''left-to-right maximum'' of a permutation ''Ο'' is an element ''i'' such that ''Ο''(''j'') < ''Ο''(''i'') for all ''j < i''.
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