I recently calculated the number (possible multidegrees) of Fano complete intersections of dimension $n$ , because I wanted to make the remark that it grows "very rapidly" as $n \rightarrow \infty$ The calculation itself is an "exercise" and in particular it is surely well-known. I would like to know how number theorists/combinatorists would think about the growth of this function.
By the adjunction formula a smooth complete intersection in $\mathbb{P}^k$ of multidegree $(d_{1}, \ldots d_{m})$ is Fano $\iff$ $d_1 + \ldots + d_m \leq k$.
This implies that the number of possible multidegrees of complete intersection Fano $n$-folds is $$\sum_{i=0}^{n-1} P(i) $$, where $P$ is that "partition function" studied by Euler and others.
I am aware that many authors don't consider $\mathbb{P}^n$ as a complete intersection. In which case we can take:
$$\sum_{i=1}^{n-1} P(i) .$$
Question: This function of course grows "very rapidly" as $n \rightarrow \infty$. How would a number theorist express that?
Q1. for example is there a "nicest" function $f(n)$ which approximates this?
Q2. Is there some technical term which describes precisely "how fast" this grows?
Also if there is a proof from first principles which is reasonably accessible for someone from another area then that would be great!