Primality by trial division: Difference between revisions
Line 80: | Line 80: | ||
}</lang> |
}</lang> |
||
=={{Header| |
=={{Header|AutoIt}}== |
||
<lang> |
<lang> |
||
#cs ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
#cs ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
Revision as of 01:20, 22 May 2012
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Write a boolean function that tells whether a given integer is prime. Remember that 1 and all non-positive numbers are not prime.
Use trial division. Even numbers over two may be eliminated right away. A loop from 3 to √n will suffice, but other loops are allowed.
- Related task: Sieve of Eratosthenes, Prime decomposition.
ACL2
<lang Lisp>(defun is-prime-r (x i)
(declare (xargs :measure (nfix (- x i)))) (if (zp (- (- x i) 1)) t (and (/= (mod x i) 0) (is-prime-r x (1+ i)))))
(defun is-prime (x)
(or (= x 2) (is-prime-r x 2)))</lang>
ActionScript
<lang ActionScript>function isPrime(n:int):Boolean { if(n < 2) return false; if(n == 2) return true; if((n & 1) == 0) return false; for(var i:int = 3; i <= Math.sqrt(n); i+= 2) if(n % i == 0) return false; return true; }</lang>
Ada
<lang ada>function Is_Prime(Item : Positive) return Boolean is
Result : Boolean := True; Test : Natural;
begin
if Item /= 2 and Item mod 2 = 0 then Result := False; else Test := 3; while Test < Integer(Sqrt(Float(Item))) loop if Item mod Test = 0 then Result := False; exit; end if; Test := Test + 2; end loop; end if; return Result;
end Is_Prime;</lang>
ALGOL 68
COMMENT This routine is used in more than one place, and is essentially a template that can by used for many different types, eg INT, LONG INT... USAGE MODE ISPRIMEINT = INT, LONG INT, etc PR READ "prelude/is_prime.a68" PR END COMMENT
PROC is prime = ( ISPRIMEINT p )BOOL: IF p <= 1 OR ( NOT ODD p AND p/= 2) THEN FALSE ELSE BOOL prime := TRUE; FOR i FROM 3 BY 2 TO ENTIER sqrt(p) WHILE prime := p MOD i /= 0 DO SKIP OD; prime FI
<lang algol68>main:(
INT upb=100; printf(($" The primes up to "g(-3)" are:"l$,upb)); FOR i TO upb DO IF is prime(i) THEN printf(($g(-4)$,i)) FI OD; printf($l$)
)</lang>
- Output:
The primes up to 100 are: 2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97
AutoHotkey
Discussion <lang autohotkey>MsgBox % IsPrime(1995937) Loop
MsgBox % A_Index-3 . " is " . (IsPrime(A_Index-3) ? "" : "not ") . "prime."
IsPrime(n,k=2) { ; testing primality with trial divisors not multiple of 2,3,5, up to sqrt(n)
d := k+(k<7 ? 1+(k>2) : SubStr("6-----4---2-4---2-4---6-----2",Mod(k,30),1)) Return n < 3 ? n>1 : Mod(n,k) ? (d*d <= n ? IsPrime(n,d) : 1) : 0
}</lang>
AutoIt
<lang>
- cs ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
AutoIt Version: 3.3.8.1 Author: Alexander Alvonellos
Script Function:
Perform primality test on a given integer $number. RETURNS: TRUE/FALSE
- ce ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Func main() ConsoleWrite("The primes up to 100 are: " & @LF) For $i = 1 To 100 Step 1 If(isPrime($i)) Then If($i <> 97) Then ConsoleWrite($i & ", ") Else ConsoleWrite($i) EndIf EndIf Next EndFunc
- Returns 0 on false
Func isPrime($n) If($n < 2) Then Return False If($n = 2) Then Return True If(BitAnd($n, 1) = 0) Then Return False For $i = 3 To Sqrt($n) Step 2 If(Mod($n, $i) = 0) Then Return False Next Return True EndFunc </lang>
AWK
$ awk 'func prime(n){for(d=2;d<=sqrt(n);d++)if(!(n%d)){return 0};return 1}{print prime($1)}'
Or more legibly, and with n <= 1 handling
<lang AWK>function prime(n) {
if (n <= 1) return 0 for (d = 2; d <= sqrt(n); d++) if (!(n % d)) return 0 return 1
}
{print prime($1)}</lang>
BASIC
Returns 1 for prime, 0 for non-prime <lang QBasic>FUNCTION prime% (n!)
STATIC i AS INTEGER IF n = 2 THEN prime = 1 ELSEIF n <= 1 OR n MOD 2 = 0 THEN prime = 0 ELSE prime = 1 FOR i = 3 TO INT(SQR(n)) STEP 2 IF n MOD i = 0 THEN prime = 0 EXIT FUNCTION END IF NEXT i END IF
END FUNCTION
' Test and display primes 1 .. 50 DECLARE FUNCTION prime% (n!) FOR n = 1 TO 50
IF prime(n) = 1 THEN PRINT n;
NEXT n</lang>
- Output:
2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47
ZX Spectrum Basic
<lang ZXBasic>10 LET n=0: LET p=0 20 INPUT "Enter number: ";n 30 GO SUB 1000 40 IF p=0 THEN PRINT n;" is not prime!" 50 IF p<>0 THEN PRINT n;" is prime!" 60 GO TO 10 1000 REM *************** 1001 REM * PRIME CHECK * 1002 REM *************** 1010 LET p=0 1020 IF n/2=INT (n/2) THEN RETURN 1030 LET p=1 1040 FOR i=3 TO SQR (n) STEP 2 1050 IF n/i=INT (n/i) THEN LET p=0: LET i= SQR (n) 1060 NEXT i 1070 RETURN </lang>
- Output:
15 is not prime! 17 is prime! 119 is not prime! 137 is prime!
Bracmat
<lang bracmat> ( prime
= incs n I inc . 4 2 4 2 4 6 2 6:?incs & 2:?n & 1 2 2 !incs:?I & whl ' ( !n*!n:~>!arg & div$(!arg.!n)*!n:~!arg & (!I:%?inc ?I|!incs:%?inc ?I) & !n+!inc:?n ) & !n*!n:>!arg )
& 100000000000:?p & whl
' ( !p+1:<100000000100:?p & ( prime$!p & out$!p | ) )
& ;</lang>
- Output:
100000000003 100000000019 100000000057 100000000063 100000000069 100000000073 100000000091
C
<lang c>int is_prime(unsigned int n) { unsigned int p; if (!(n & 1) || n < 2 ) return n == 2;
/* comparing p*p <= n can overflow */ for (p = 3; p <= n/p; p += 2) if (!(n % p)) return 0; return 1; }</lang>
C++
<lang cpp>#include <cmath>
bool is_prime(unsigned int n) {
if (n <= 1) return false; if (n == 2) return true; for (unsigned int i = 2; i <= sqrt(n); ++i) if (n % i == 0) return false; return true;
}</lang>
C#
<lang csharp>static bool isPrime(int n)
{ if (n <= 1) return false; for (int i = 2; i * i <= n; i++) if (n % i == 0) return false; return true; }</lang>
Clojure
The symbol # is a shortcut for creating lambda functions; the arguments in such a function are %1, %2, %3... (or simply % if there is only one argument). Thus, #(< (* % %) n) is equivalent to (fn [x] (< (* x x) n)) or more mathematically f(x) = x * x < n. <lang clojure>(defn divides? [k n] (= (rem n k) 0))
(defn prime? [n]
(if (< n 2) false (empty? (filter #(divides? % n) (take-while #(<= (* % %) n) (range 2 n))))))</lang>
CMake
<lang cmake># Prime predicate: does n be a prime number? Sets var to true or false. function(primep var n)
if(n GREATER 2) math(EXPR odd "${n} % 2") if(odd) # n > 2 and n is odd. set(factor 3) # Loop for odd factors from 3, while factor <= n / factor. math(EXPR quot "${n} / ${factor}") while(NOT factor GREATER quot) math(EXPR rp "${n} % ${factor}") # Trial division if(NOT rp) # factor divides n, so n is not prime. set(${var} false PARENT_SCOPE) return() endif() math(EXPR factor "${factor} + 2") # Next odd factor math(EXPR quot "${n} / ${factor}") endwhile(NOT factor GREATER quot) # Loop found no factor, so n is prime. set(${var} true PARENT_SCOPE) else() # n > 2 and n is even, so n is not prime. set(${var} false PARENT_SCOPE) endif(odd) elseif(n EQUAL 2) set(${var} true PARENT_SCOPE) # 2 is prime. else() set(${var} false PARENT_SCOPE) # n < 2 is not prime. endif()
endfunction(primep)</lang>
<lang cmake># Quick example. foreach(i -5 1 2 3 37 39)
primep(b ${i}) if(b) message(STATUS "${i} is prime.") else() message(STATUS "${i} is _not_ prime.") endif(b)
endforeach(i)</lang>
CoffeeScript
<lang coffeescript>is_prime = (n) ->
# simple prime detection using trial division, works # for all integers return false if n <= 1 # by definition p = 2 while p * p <= n return false if n % p == 0 p += 1 true
for i in [-1..100]
console.log i if is_prime i</lang>
Common Lisp
<lang Lisp> (defun primep (a)
(cond ((= a 2) T) ((or (<= a 1) (= (mod a 2) 0)) nil) ((loop for i from 3 to (sqrt a) by 2 do (if (= (mod a i) 0) (return nil))) nil) (T T)))</lang>
<lang Lisp>(defun primep (n)
"Is N prime?" (and (> n 1) (or (= n 2) (oddp n)) (loop for i from 3 to (isqrt n) by 2
never (zerop (rem n i)))))</lang>
D
Simple Version
<lang d>import std.stdio, std.algorithm, std.range, std.math;
bool isPrime(in int n) pure nothrow {
if (n == 2) return true; if (n <= 1 || (n & 1) == 0) return false;
for(int i = 3; i <= sqrt(cast(real)n); i += 2) if (n % i == 0) return false; return true;
}
void main() { // demo code
iota(2, 40).filter!isPrime().writeln();
}</lang>
- Output:
[2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37]
Version with excluded multiplies of 2 and 3
Same output. <lang d>import std.stdio, std.algorithm, std.range;
bool isPrime2(Integer)(in Integer number) pure nothrow {
// Adapted from: http://www.devx.com/vb2themax/Tip/19051 // manually test 1, 2, 3 and multiples of 2 and 3 if (number == 2 || number == 3) return true; else if (number < 2 || number % 2 == 0 || number % 3 == 0) return false;
/* we can now avoid to consider multiples * of 2 and 3. This can be done really simply * by starting at 5 and incrementing by 2 and 4 * alternatively, that is: * 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 25, 29, 31, 35, 37, ... * we don't need to go higher than the square root of the number */ for (Integer divisor = 5, increment = 2; divisor*divisor <= number; divisor += increment, increment = 6 - increment) if (number % divisor == 0) return false;
return true; // if we get here, the number is prime
}
void main() { // demo code
iota(2, 40).filter!isPrime2().writeln();
}</lang>
Two Way Test
Odd divisors is generated both from increasing and decreasing sequence, may improve performance for numbers that have large minimum factor. Same output. <lang d>import std.stdio, std.algorithm, std.range, std.math;
bool isPrime3(T)(in T n) pure nothrow {
if (n % 2 == 0 || n <= 1) return n == 2; T head = 3, tail = (cast(T)sqrt(cast(real)n) / 2) * 2 + 1; for ( ; head <= tail ; head +=2, tail -= 2) if ((n % head) == 0 || (n % tail) == 0) return false; return true;
}
void main() { // demo code
iota(2, 40).filter!isPrime3().writeln();
}</lang>
Delphi
<lang Delphi>function IsPrime(aNumber: Integer): Boolean; var
I: Integer;
begin
Result:= True; if(aNumber = 2) then Exit;
Result:= not ((aNumber mod 2 = 0) or (aNumber <= 1)); if not Result then Exit;
for I:=3 to Trunc(Sqrt(aNumber)) do if(aNumber mod I = 0) then begin Result:= False; Break; end;
end;</lang>
E
<lang e>def isPrime(n :int) {
if (n == 2) { return true } else if (n <= 1 || n %% 2 == 0) { return false } else { def limit := (n :float64).sqrt().ceil() var divisor := 1 while ((divisor += 2) <= limit) { if (n %% divisor == 0) { return false } } return true }
}</lang>
Erlang
<lang erlang>is_prime(N) when N == 2 -> true; is_prime(N) when N < 2 orelse N rem 2 == 0 -> false; is_prime(N) -> is_prime(N,3).
is_prime(N,K) when K*K > N -> true; is_prime(N,K) when N rem K == 0 -> false; is_prime(N,K) -> is_prime(N,K+2).</lang>
Euphoria
<lang euphoria>function is_prime(integer n)
if n<=2 or remainder(n,2)=0 then return 0 else for i=3 to sqrt(n) by 2 do if remainder(n,i)=0 then return 0 end if end for return 1 end if
end function</lang>
Factor
<lang factor>USING: combinators kernel math math.functions math.ranges sequences ;
- prime? ( n -- ? )
{ { [ dup 2 < ] [ drop f ] } { [ dup even? ] [ 2 = ] } [ 3 over sqrt 2 <range> [ mod 0 > ] with all? ] } cond ;</lang>
FALSE
<lang false>[0\$2=$[@~@@]?~[$$2>\1&&[\~\
3[\$@$@1+\$*>][\$@$@$@$@\/*=[%\~\$]?2+]#%
]?]?%]p:</lang>
Forth
<lang forth>: prime? ( n -- ? )
dup 2 < if drop false else dup 2 = if drop true else dup 1 and 0= if drop false else 3 begin 2dup dup * >= while 2dup mod 0= if 2drop false exit then 2 + repeat 2drop true then then then ;</lang>
Fortran
<lang fortran> FUNCTION isPrime(number)
LOGICAL :: isPrime INTEGER, INTENT(IN) :: number INTEGER :: i IF(number==2) THEN isPrime = .TRUE. ELSE IF(number < 2 .OR. MOD(number,2) == 0) THEN isPRIME = .FALSE. ELSE isPrime = .TRUE. DO i = 3, INT(SQRT(REAL(number))), 2 IF(MOD(number,i) == 0) THEN isPrime = .FALSE. EXIT END IF END DO END IF END FUNCTION</lang>
GAP
<lang gap>IsPrimeTrial := function(n)
local k, m; if n < 5 then return (n = 2) or (n = 3); fi; if RemInt(n, 2) = 0 then return false; fi; m := RootInt(n); k := 3; while k <= m do if RemInt(n, k) = 0 then return false; fi; k := k + 2; od; return true;
end;
Filtered([1 .. 100], IsPrimeTrial);
- [ 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59, 61, 67, 71, 73, 79, 83, 89, 97 ]</lang>
Go
<lang go>func isPrime(p int) bool {
if p < 2 {return false} if p % 2 == 0 { return false }
for i := 3; i*i < p; i += 2 { if p % i == 0 { return false } } return true
}</lang>
Groovy
<lang groovy>def isPrime = {
it == 2 || it > 1 && (2..Math.max(2, (int) Math.sqrt(it))).every{ k -> it % k != 0 }
}
(0..20).grep(isPrime)</lang>
- Output:
[2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19]
Haskell
<lang haskell>isPrime n = n > 1 && coprime primeNums n
coprime factors n = foldr (\f r-> f*f>n || (rem n f /= 0 && r)) True factors
-- primeNums = filter (coprime [2..]) [2..]
primeNums = 2 : 3 : filter (coprime $ tail primeNums) [5,7..]</lang>
Any increasing unbounded primes source can be used with the testing function coprime
to define isPrime
function, say one from Sieve of Eratosthenes, or coprime
itself can be used to define primeNums
as above, because it stops as soon as the square root is reached.
Trial division can be used to quickly produce short ranges of primes: <lang haskell>primesFromTo n m = filter isPrime [n..m]</lang> This code, when inlined, rearranged and optimized, leads to segmented "generate-and-test" sieve by trial division.
Sieve by trial division
One often sees a "naive" version presented as an unbounded sieve of Eratosthenes, similar to David Turner's 1975 SASL code, <lang haskell>primes = sieve [2..] where
sieve (p:xs) = p : sieve [x | x <- xs, rem x p /= 0]</lang>
As is shown in Melissa O'Neill's "The Genuine Sieve of Eratosthenes", this is rather a sub-optimal trial division algorithm. Its complexity is quadratic in number of primes produced whereas that of optimal trial division is , and of true SoE it is , in n primes produced. It is easily fixed into having normal trial division complexity, by making it bounded again: <lang haskell>primesTo m = 2 : sieve [3,5..m] where
sieve (p:xs) | p*p > m = p : xs | True = p : sieve [x | x <- xs, rem x p /= 0]</lang>
To make it unbounded, the guard cannot be simply discarded.
Segmented Generate and Test
Explicating the list of filters on each segment between the consecutive squares of primes, as a list of factors to test by (so that no testing is done prematurely), and rearranging to avoid recalculations, leads to this: <lang haskell>primes = 2 : 3 : sieve 5 9 (drop 2 primes) 0 where
sieve x q ps k = let fs = take k (tail primes) in filter ((`all` fs) . ((/=0).) . rem) [x,x+2..q-2] ++ sieve (q+2) (head ps^2) (tail ps) (k+1)</lang>
Runs at empirical time complexity, in n primes produced. Can be used as a framework for unbounded segmented sieves, replacing divisibility testing with proper sieve of Eratosthenes, etc.
HicEst
<lang HicEst> DO n = 1, 1E6
Euler = n^2 + n + 41 IF( Prime(Euler) == 0 ) WRITE(Messagebox) Euler, ' is NOT prime for n =', n ENDDO ! e.g. 1681 = 40^2 + 40 + 41 is NOT prime
END
FUNCTION Prime(number)
Prime = number == 2 IF( (number > 2) * MOD(number,2) ) THEN DO i = 3, number^0.5, 2 IF(MOD(number,i) == 0) THEN Prime = 0 RETURN ENDIF ENDDO Prime = 1 ENDIF
END</lang>
Icon and Unicon
Procedure shown without a main program. <lang Icon>procedure isprime(n) #: return n if prime (using trial division) or fail if not n = integer(n) | n < 2 then fail # ensure n is an integer greater than 1 every if 0 = (n % (2 to sqrt(n))) then fail return n end</lang>
J
<lang j>isprime=: 3 : 'if. 3>:y do. 1<y else. 0 *./@:< y|~2+i.<.%:y end.'</lang>
Java
<lang java>public static boolean prime(long a){
if(a == 2){ return true; }else if(a <= 1 || a % 2 == 0){ return false; } long max = (long)Math.sqrt(a); for(long n= 3; n <= max; n+= 2){ if(a % n == 0){ return false; } } return true;
}</lang>
By Regular Expression
<lang java>public static boolean prime(int n) {
return !new String(new char[n]).matches(".?|(..+?)\\1+");
}</lang>
JavaScript
<lang javascript>function isPrime(n) {
if (n == 2) { return true; } else if ((n < 2) || (n % 2 == 0)) { return false; } else { for (var i = 3; i < Math.ceil(Math.sqrt(n)); i += 2) { if (n % i == 0) return false; } return true; }
}</lang>
Joy
From here <lang joy>DEFINE prime ==
2 [ [dup * >] nullary [rem 0 >] dip and ] [ succ ] while dup * < .</lang>
K
<lang K> isprime:{(x>1)&&/x!'2_!1+_sqrt x}
&isprime'!100
2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 61 67 71 73 79 83 89 97</lang>
Liberty BASIC
<lang lb>for n =1 to 50
if prime( n) = 1 then print n; " is prime."
next n
wait
function prime( n)
if n =2 then prime =1 else if ( n <=1) or ( n mod 2 =0) then prime =0 else prime =1 for i = 3 to int( sqr( n)) step 2 if ( n MOD i) =0 then prime = 0: exit function next i end if end if
end function
end</lang>
Logo
<lang logo>to prime? :n
if :n < 2 [output "false] if :n = 2 [output "true] if equal? 0 modulo :n 2 [output "false] for [i 3 [sqrt :n] 2] [if equal? 0 modulo :n :i [output "false]] output "true
end</lang>
LSE64
<lang LSE64>over : 2 pick
2dup : over over even? : 1 & 0 = # trial n d yields "n d 0/1 false" or "n d+2 true" trial : 2 + true trial : 2dup % 0 = then 0 false trial : 2dup dup * < then 1 false trial-loop : trial &repeat # prime? n yields flag prime? : 3 trial-loop >flag drop drop prime? : dup even? then drop false prime? : dup 2 = then drop true prime? : dup 2 < then drop false</lang>
Lua
<lang Lua>function IsPrime( n )
if n <= 1 or ( n ~= 2 and n % 2 == 0 ) then return false end
for i = 3, math.sqrt(n), 2 do
if n % i == 0 then
return false
end
end
return true
end</lang>
M4
<lang M4>define(`testnext',
`ifelse(eval($2*$2>$1),1, 1, `ifelse(eval($1%$2==0),1, 0, `testnext($1,eval($2+2))')')')
define(`isprime',
`ifelse($1,2, 1, `ifelse(eval($1<=1 || $1%2==0),1, 0, `testnext($1,3)')')')
isprime(9) isprime(11)</lang>
- Output:
0 1
Mathematica
<lang mathematica>IsPrime[n_Integer] :=
Module[{k = 2}, If[n <= 1, Return False]; If[n == 2, Return True]; While[k <= Sqrt[n], If[Mod[n, k] == 0, Return[False], k++] ]; Return[True] ]</lang>
MATLAB
<lang MATLAB>function isPrime = primalityByTrialDivision(n)
if n == 2 isPrime = true; return elseif (mod(n,2) == 0) || (n <= 1) isPrime = false; return end %First n mod (3 to sqrt(n)) is taken. This will be a vector where the %first element is equal to n mod 3 and the last element is equal to n %mod sqrt(n). Then the all function is applied to that vector. If all %of the elements of this vector are non-zero (meaning n is prime) then %all() returns true. Otherwise, n is composite, so it returns false. %This return value is then assigned to the variable isPrime. isPrime = all(mod(n, (3:round(sqrt(n))) ));
end</lang>
- Sample output:
<lang MATLAB>>> arrayfun(@primalityByTrialDivision,(1:14))
ans =
0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0</lang>
MAXScript
<lang MAXScript> fn isPrime n =
( if n == 2 then ( return true ) else if (n <= 1) OR (mod n 2 == 0) then ( return false ) for i in 3 to (sqrt n) by 2 do ( if mod n i == 0 then return false ) true )</lang>
MUMPS
<lang MUMPS>ISPRIME(N)
QUIT:(N=2) 1 NEW I,TP SET TP=+'$PIECE((N/2),".",2) IF 'TP FOR I=3:2:(N**.5) SET TP=+'$PIECE((N/I),".",2) Q:TP KILL I QUIT 'TP</lang>
Usage (0 is false, nonzero is true):
USER>W $$ISPRIME^ROSETTA(2) 1 USER>W $$ISPRIME^ROSETTA(4) 0 USER>W $$ISPRIME^ROSETTA(7) 1 USER>W $$ISPRIME^ROSETTA(97) 1 USER>W $$ISPRIME^ROSETTA(99) 0
NetRexx
<lang NetRexx>/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref savelog symbols nobinary
parse arg nbr rangeBegin rangeEnd .
if nbr = | nbr = '.' then do
if rangeBegin = | rangeBegin = '.' then rangeBegin = 1 if rangeEnd = | rangeEnd = '.' then rangeEnd = 100 if rangeEnd > rangeBegin then direction = 1 else direction = -1
say 'List of prime numbers from' rangeBegin 'to' rangeEnd':' primes = loop nn = rangeBegin to rangeEnd by direction if isPrime(nn) then primes = primes nn end nn primes = primes.strip say ' 'primes.changestr(' ', ',') say ' Total number of primes:' primes.words end
else do
if isPrime(nbr) then say nbr.right(20) 'is prime' else say nbr.right(20) 'is not prime' end
return
method isPrime(nbr = long) public static binary returns boolean
ip = boolean
select when nbr < 2 then do ip = isFalse end when '2 3 5 7'.wordpos(Rexx(nbr)) \= 0 then do -- crude shortcut ripped from the Rexx example ip = isTrue end when nbr // 2 == 0 | nbr // 3 == 0 then do -- another shortcut permitted by the one above ip = isFalse end otherwise do nn = long nnStartTerm = long 3 -- a reasonable start term - nn <= 2 is never prime nnEndTerm = long Math.ceil(Math.sqrt(nbr)) -- a reasonable end term ip = isTrue -- prime the pump (pun intended) loop nn = nnStartTerm to nnEndTerm by 2 -- Note: in Rexx and NetRexx "//" is the 'remainder of division operator' (which is not the same as modulo) if nbr // nn = 0 then do ip = isFalse leave nn end end nn end end
return ip
method isTrue public static returns boolean
return 1 == 1
method isFalse public static returns boolean
return \isTrue</lang>
- Output:
$ java -cp . RCPrimality List of prime numbers from 1 to 100: 2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,53,59,61,67,71,73,79,83,89,97 Total number of primes: 25 $ java -cp . RCPrimality 91 91 is not prime $ java -cp . RCPrimality 101 101 is prime $ java -cp . RCPrimality . . 25 List of prime numbers from 1 to 25: 2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23 Total number of primes: 9 $ java -cp . RCPrimality . 9900 10010 List of prime numbers from 9900 to 10010: 9901,9907,9923,9929,9931,9941,9949,9967,9973,10007,10009 Total number of primes: 11 $ java -cp . RCPrimality . -57 1 List of prime numbers from -57 to 1: Total number of primes: 0 $ java -cp . RCPrimality . 100 -57 List of prime numbers from 100 to -57: 97,89,83,79,73,71,67,61,59,53,47,43,41,37,31,29,23,19,17,13,11,7,5,3,2 Total number of primes: 25
Rexx version reimplemented in NetRexx
<lang NetRexx>/* NetRexx */
options replace format comments java crossref savelog symbols nobinary
/*REXX program tests for primality using (kinda smartish) trial division*/
parse arg n . /*let user choose how many, maybe*/ if n== then n=10000 /*if not, then assume the default*/ p=0 /*a count of primes (so far). */
/*I like Heinz's 57 varieties... */ loop j=-57 to n /*start in the cellar and work up*/ if \isprime(j) then iterate /*if not prime, keep looking. */ p=p+1 /*bump the jelly bean counter. */ if j.length>2 then iterate /*only show two-digit primes. */ say j.right(20) 'is prime.' /*Just blab about the wee primes.*/ end
say say "there're" p "primes up to" n '(inclusive).' exit
/*-------------------------------------ISPRIME subroutine---------------*/ method isprime(x) public static returns boolean --isprime: procedure; arg x /*get the number in question*/ if '2 3 5 7'.wordpos(x)\==0 then return 1 /*is it a teacher's pet? */ if x<2 | x//2==0 | x//3==0 then return 0 /*weed out the riff-raff. */
/*Note: // is modulus. */ loop j=5 by 6 until j*j>x /*skips multiples of three. */ if x//j==0 | x//(j+2)==0 then return 0 /*do a pair of divides (mod)*/ end
return 1 /*I'm exhausted, it's prime!*/</lang>
Objeck
<lang objeck>function : IsPrime(n : Int) ~ Bool {
if(n <= 1) { return false; }; for(i := 2; i * i <= n; i += 1;) { if(n % i = 0) { return false; }; }; return true;
}</lang>
OCaml
<lang ocaml>let is_prime n =
if n = 2 then true else if n < 2 || n mod 2 = 0 then false else let rec loop k = if k * k > n then true else if n mod k = 0 then false else loop (k+2) in loop 3</lang>
Octave
This function works on vectors and matrix. <lang octave>function b = isthisprime(n)
for r = 1:rows(n) for c = 1:columns(n) b(r,c) = false; if ( n(r,c) == 2 )
b(r,c) = true;
elseif ( (n(r,c) < 2) || (mod(n(r,c),2) == 0) )
b(r,c) = false;
else
b(r,c) = true; for i = 3:2:sqrt(n(r,c)) if ( mod(n(r,c), i) == 0 ) b(r,c) = false; break; endif endfor
endif endfor endfor
endfunction
% as test, print prime numbers from 1 to 100 p = [1:100]; pv = isthisprime(p); disp(p( pv ));</lang>
PARI/GP
<lang parigp>trial(n)={
if(n < 4, return(n > 1)); /* Handle negatives */ forprime(p=2,sqrt(n), if(n%p == 0, return(0)) ); 1
};</lang>
Pascal
<lang Pascal>program primes;
function prime(n: integer): boolean; var
i: integer; max: real;
begin
if n = 2 then prime := true else if (n <= 1) or (n mod 2 = 0) then prime := false else begin prime := true; i := 3; max := sqrt(n); while i <= max do begin if n mod i = 0 then begin prime := false; exit end; i := i + 2 end end
end;
{ Test and display primes 0 .. 50 } var
n: integer;
begin
for n := 0 to 50 do if (prime(n)) then write(n, ' ');
end.</lang>
- Output:
2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47
Perl
A more idiomatic solution than the RE-based version below: <lang perl>sub prime { my $n = shift || $_;
$n % $_ or return for 2 .. sqrt $n; $n > 1
}
print join(', ' => grep prime, 1..100), "\n";</lang>
By Regular Expression
JAPH by Abigail 1999 [1] in conference slides 2000 [2] <lang perl>sub isprime {
('1' x shift) !~ /^1?$|^(11+?)\1+$/
}
- A quick test
print join(', ', grep(isprime($_), 0..39)), "\n";</lang>
Perl 6
Here we use a "none" junction which will autothread through the %% "is divisible by" operator to assert that $n is not divisible by 2 or any of the odd numbers up to its square root. Read it just as you would English: "Integer $n is prime if it is greater than one and is divisible by none of 2, 3, whatever + 2, up to but not including whatever is greater than the square root of $n." <lang perl6>sub prime (Int $n --> Bool) {
$n > 1 and $n %% none 2, 3, *+2 ...^ * > sqrt $n;
}</lang> (No pun indented.)
Testing: <lang perl6>say "$_ is{ "n't" x !prime($_) } prime." for 1 .. 100;</lang>
PHP
<lang php><?php function prime($a) {
if (($a % 2 == 0 && $a != 2) || $a < 2) return false; $limit = sqrt($a); for ($i = 2; $i <= $limit; $i++) if ($a % $i == 0) return false; return true;
}
foreach (range(1, 100) as $x)
if (prime($x)) echo "$x\n";
?></lang>
By Regular Expression
<lang php><?php function prime($a) {
return !preg_match('/^1?$|^(11+?)\1+$/', str_repeat('1', $a));
} ?></lang>
PicoLisp
<lang PicoLisp>(de prime? (N)
(or (= N 2) (and (> N 1) (bit? 1 N) (for (D 3 T (+ D 2)) (T (> D (sqrt N)) T) (T (=0 (% N D)) NIL) ) ) ) )</lang>
PL/I
<lang PL/I>is_prime: procedure (n) returns (bit(1));
declare n fixed (15); declare i fixed (10);
if n < 2 then return ('0'b); if mod(n, 2) = 0 then return ('0'b);
do i = 3 to sqrt(n) by 2; if mod(n, i) = 0 then return ('0'b); end; return ('1'b);
end is_prime;</lang>
PowerShell
<lang powershell>function isPrime ($n) {
if ($n -eq 1) { return $false } else { return (@(2..[Math]::Sqrt($n) | Where-Object { $n % $_ -eq 0 }).Length -eq 0) }
}</lang>
PureBasic
<lang PureBasic>Procedure.i IsPrime(n)
Protected k
If n = 2 ProcedureReturn #True EndIf
If n <= 1 Or n % 2 = 0 ProcedureReturn #False EndIf For k = 3 To Int(Sqr(n)) Step 2 If n % k = 0 ProcedureReturn #False EndIf Next
ProcedureReturn #True
EndProcedure</lang>
Python
The simplest primality test, using trial division:
<lang python>def prime(a):
return not (a < 2 or any(a % x == 0 for x in xrange(2, int(a**0.5) + 1)))</lang>
Another test. Exclude even numbers first: <lang python>def prime2(a):
if a == 2: return True if a < 2 or a % 2 == 0: return False return not any(a % x == 0 for x in xrange(3, int(a**0.5) + 1, 2))</lang>
Yet another test. Exclude multiples of 2 and 3, see http://www.devx.com/vb2themax/Tip/19051:
<lang python>def prime3(a):
if a < 2: return False if a == 2 or a == 3: return True # manually test 2 and 3 if a % 2 == 0 or a % 3 == 0: return False # exclude multiples of 2 and 3
maxDivisor = a**0.5 d, i = 5, 2 while d <= maxDivisor: if a % d == 0: return False d += i i = 6 - i # this modifies 2 into 4 and viceversa
return True</lang>
By Regular Expression
Regular expression by "Abigail".
(An explanation is given in "The Story of the Regexp and the Primes").
<lang python>>>> import re
>>> def isprime(n):
return not re.match(r'^1?$|^(11+?)\1+$', '1' * n)
>>> # A quick test >>> [i for i in range(40) if isprime(i)] [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37]</lang>
Qi
<lang Qi>(define prime?-0
K N -> true where (> (* K K) N) K N -> false where (= 0 (MOD N K)) K N -> (prime?-0 (+ K 2) N))
(define prime?
1 -> false 2 -> true N -> false where (= 0 (MOD N 2)) N -> (prime?-0 3 N))</lang>
R
<lang R>isPrime <- function(n) {
if (n == 2) return(TRUE) if ( (n <= 1) || ( n %% 2 == 0 ) ) return(FALSE) for( i in 3:sqrt(n) ) { if ( n %% i == 0 ) return(FALSE) } TRUE
}</lang>
<lang R>print(lapply(1:100, isPrime))</lang>
REBOL
<lang REBOL>prime?: func [n] [
case [ n = 2 [ true ] n <= 1 or (n // 2 = 0) [ false ] true [ for i 3 round square-root n 2 [ if n // i = 0 [ return false ] ] true ] ]
]</lang>
<lang REBOL>repeat i 100 [ print [i prime? i]]</lang>
REXX
<lang rexx>/*REXX program tests for primality using (kinda smartish) trial division*/
parse arg n . /*let user choose how many, maybe*/ if n== then n=10000 /*if not, then assume the default*/ p=0 /*a count of primes (so far). */
/*I like Heinz's 57 varieties... */ do j=-57 to n /*start in the cellar and work up*/ if \isprime(j) then iterate /*if not prime, keep looking. */ p=p+1 /*bump the jelly bean counter. */ if length(j)>2 then iterate /*only show two-digit primes. */ say right(j,20) 'is prime.' /*Just blab about the wee primes.*/ end
say say "there're" p "primes up to" n '(inclusive).' exit /*─────────────────────────────────────ISPRIME subroutine───────────────*/ isprime: procedure; arg x /*get the number in question*/ if wordpos(x,'2 3 5 7')\==0 then return 1 /*is it a teacher's pet? */ if x<2 | x//2==0 | x//3==0 then return 0 /*weed out the riff-raff. */
/*Note: // is modulus. */ do j=5 by 6 until j*j>x /*skips multiples of three. */ if x//j==0 | x//(j+2)==0 then return 0 /*do a pair of divides (mod)*/ end
return 1 /*I'm exhausted, it's prime!*/</lang>
- Output:
2 is prime. 3 is prime. 5 is prime. 7 is prime. 11 is prime. 13 is prime. 17 is prime. 19 is prime. 23 is prime. 29 is prime. 31 is prime. 37 is prime. 41 is prime. 43 is prime. 47 is prime. 53 is prime. 59 is prime. 61 is prime. 67 is prime. 71 is prime. 73 is prime. 79 is prime. 83 is prime. 89 is prime. 97 is prime. there're 1229 primes up to 10000 (inclusive).
Ruby
<lang ruby>def prime(a)
if a == 2 true elsif a <= 1 || a % 2 == 0 false else divisors = Enumerable::Enumerator.new(3..Math.sqrt(a), :step, 2) # this also creates an enumerable object: divisors = (3..Math.sqrt(a)).step(2) !divisors.any? { |d| a % d == 0 } end
end</lang>
The mathn package in the stdlib for Ruby 1.9.2 contains this compact Prime#prime?
method:
<lang ruby> def prime?(value, generator = Prime::Generator23.new)
return false if value < 2 for num in generator q,r = value.divmod num return true if q < num return false if r == 0 end end</lang>
Without any fancy stuff: <lang ruby>def primes(limit)
(enclose = lambda { |primes| primes.last.succ.upto(limit) do |trial_pri| if primes.find { |pri| (trial_pri % pri).zero? }.nil? return enclose.call(primes << trial_pri) end end primes }).call([2])
end</lang>
By Regular Expression
<lang ruby>def isprime(n)
'1'*n !~ /^1?$|^(11+?)\1+$/
end</lang>
Run BASIC
<lang runbasic>' Test and display primes 1 .. 50 for i = 1 TO 50
if prime(i) <> 0 then print i;" ";
next i
FUNCTION prime(n) if n < 2 then prime = 0 : goto [exit] if n = 2 then prime = 1 : goto [exit] if n mod 2 = 0 then prime = 0 : goto [exit] prime = 1 for i = 3 to int(n^.5) step 2
if n mod i = 0 then prime = 0 : goto [exit]
next i [exit]
END FUNCTION</lang>
2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 25 29 31 37 41 43 47 49
SAS
<lang sas>data primes; do n=1 to 1000;
link primep; if primep then output;
end; stop;
primep: if n < 4 then do;
primep=n=2 or n=3; return;
end; primep=0; if mod(n,2)=0 then return; do k=3 to sqrt(n) by 2;
if mod(n,k)=0 then return;
end; primep=1; return; keep n; run;</lang>
Scala
<lang scala>def isPrime(n: Int) = n > 1 && (Iterator.from(2) takeWhile (d => d * d <= n) forall (n % _ != 0))</lang>
Scheme
<lang scheme>(define (prime? number)
(define (*prime? divisor) (or (> (* divisor divisor) number) (and (> (modulo number divisor) 0) (*prime? (+ divisor 1))))) (and (> number 1) (*prime? 2)))</lang>
<lang scheme>; twice faster, testing only odd divisors (define (prime? n)
(if (< n 4) (> n 1) (and (odd? n)
(let loop ((k 3)) (or (> (* k k) n) (and (positive? (remainder n k)) (loop (+ k 2))))))))</lang>
Seed7
<lang seed7>const func boolean: is_prime (in integer: number) is func
result var boolean: prime is FALSE; local var integer: upTo is 0; var integer: testNum is 3; begin if number = 2 then prime := TRUE; elsif number rem 2 = 0 or number <= 1 then prime := FALSE; else upTo := sqrt(number); while number rem testNum <> 0 and testNum <= upTo do testNum +:= 2; end while; prime := testNum > upTo; end if; end func;</lang>
Original source: [3]
SNOBOL4
<lang SNOBOL4>define('isprime(n)i,max') :(isprime_end) isprime isprime = n
le(n,1) :s(freturn) eq(n,2) :s(return) eq(remdr(n,2),0) :s(freturn) max = sqrt(n); i = 1
isp1 i = le(i + 2,max) i + 2 :f(return)
eq(remdr(n,i),0) :s(freturn)f(isp1)
isprime_end</lang>
By Patterns
Using the Abigail regex transated to Snobol patterns. <lang SNOBOL4> define('rprime(n)str,pat1,pat2,m1') :(end_rprime) rprime str = dupl('1',n); rprime = n
pat1 = ('1' | ) pat2 = ('11' arbno('1')) $ m1 (*m1 arbno(*m1)) str pos(0) (pat1 | pat2) rpos(0) :s(freturn)f(return)
end_rprime
- # Test and display primes 0 .. 50
loop rprimes = rprimes rprime(n) ' '
n = lt(n,50) n + 1 :s(loop) output = rprimes
end</lang>
- Output:
2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47
Standard ML
<lang sml>fun is_prime n =
if n = 2 then true else if n < 2 orelse n mod 2 = 0 then false else let fun loop k = if k * k > n then true else if n mod k = 0 then false else loop (k+2) in loop 3 end</lang>
Tcl
<lang tcl>proc is_prime n {
if {$n <= 1} {return false} if {$n == 2} {return true} if {$n % 2 == 0} {return false} for {set i 3} {$i <= sqrt($n)} {incr i 2} { if {$n % $i == 0} {return false} } return true
}</lang>
TI-83 BASIC
Prompt A If A=2:Then Disp "PRIME" Stop End If (fPart(A/2)=0 and A>0) or A<2:Then Disp "NOT PRIME" Stop End 1→P For(B,3,int(√(A))) If FPart(A/B)=0:Then 0→P √(A)→B End B+1→B End If P=1:Then Disp "PRIME" Else Disp "NOT PRIME" End
UNIX Shell
<lang bash>function primep { typeset n=$1 p=3 (( n == 2 )) && return 0 # 2 is prime. (( n & 1 )) || return 1 # Other evens are not prime. (( n >= 3 )) || return 1
# Loop for odd p from 3 to sqrt(n). # Comparing p * p <= n can overflow. while (( p <= n / p )); do # If p divides n, then n is not prime. (( n % p )) || return 1 (( p += 2 )) done return 0 # Yes, n is prime. }</lang>
<lang bash>primep() { set -- "$1" 3 test "$1" -eq 2 && return 0 # 2 is prime. expr "$1" \% 2 >/dev/null || return 1 # Other evens are not prime. test "$1" -ge 3 || return 1
# Loop for odd p from 3 to sqrt(n). # Comparing p * p <= n can overflow. We use p <= n / p. while expr $2 \<= "$1" / $2 >/dev/null; do # If p divides n, then n is not prime. expr "$1" % $2 >/dev/null || return 1 set -- "$1" `expr $2 + 2` done return 0 # Yes, n is prime. }</lang>
Ursala
Excludes even numbers, and loops only up to the approximate square root or until a factor is found. <lang Ursala>#import std
- import nat
prime = ~<{0,1}&& -={2,3}!| ~&h&& (all remainder)^Dtt/~& iota@K31</lang> Test program to try it on a few numbers: <lang Ursala>#cast %bL
test = prime* <5,6,7></lang>
- Output:
<true,false,true>
V
<lang v>[prime?
2 [[dup * >] [true] [false] ifte [% 0 >] dip and] [succ] while dup * <].</lang>
- Using it:
<lang v>|11 prime? =true |4 prime? =false</lang>
XPL0
<lang XPL0>include c:\cxpl\codes; \intrinsic 'code' declarations
func Prime(N); \Return 'true' if N is a prime number int N; int I; [if N <= 1 then return false; for I:= 3 to sqrt(N) do
if rem(N/I) = 0 then return false;
return true; ]; \Prime
int Num; repeat Num:= IntIn(0);
Text(0, if Prime(Num) then "is " else "not "); Text(0, "prime^M^J");
until Num = 0</lang>
Example output:
777777777 not prime 777777773 is prime 0 not prime
- Programming Tasks
- Prime Numbers
- ACL2
- ActionScript
- Ada
- ALGOL 68
- AutoHotkey
- AutoIt
- AWK
- BASIC
- ZX Spectrum Basic
- Bracmat
- C
- C++
- C sharp
- Clojure
- CMake
- CoffeeScript
- Common Lisp
- D
- Delphi
- E
- Erlang
- Euphoria
- Factor
- FALSE
- Forth
- Fortran
- GAP
- Go
- Groovy
- Haskell
- HicEst
- Icon
- Unicon
- J
- Java
- JavaScript
- Joy
- K
- Liberty BASIC
- Logo
- LSE64
- Lua
- M4
- Mathematica
- MATLAB
- MAXScript
- MUMPS
- NetRexx
- Objeck
- OCaml
- Octave
- PARI/GP
- Pascal
- Perl
- Perl 6
- PHP
- PicoLisp
- PL/I
- PowerShell
- PureBasic
- Python
- Qi
- R
- REBOL
- REXX
- Ruby
- Run BASIC
- SAS
- Scala
- Scheme
- Seed7
- SNOBOL4
- Standard ML
- Tcl
- TI-83 BASIC
- UNIX Shell
- Ursala
- V
- XPL0