Talk:Least common multiple: Difference between revisions
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(When I first wrote the task, I forgot about the special case for zero. I later added this special case to the task, but I left it as a draft task. --~~~~) |
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When I first wrote the task, I forgot about the special case for zero. I later added this special case to the task, but I left it as a draft task. --[[User:Kernigh|Kernigh]] 00:29, 31 March 2011 (UTC) |
When I first wrote the task, I forgot about the special case for zero. I later added this special case to the task, but I left it as a draft task. --[[User:Kernigh|Kernigh]] 00:29, 31 March 2011 (UTC) |
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==Yet another way, isn't?== |
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From ''"Yet another way is to use rational arithmetic; if you add 1/m and 1/n and reduce the fraction, then the denominator is the lcm"'' |
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I did the following: |
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<lang python>>>> def lcm(a, b): return (fractions.Fraction(1,a) + fractions.Fraction(1,b)).denominator if a and b else 0 |
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>>> lcm(12, 18) |
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36 |
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>>> lcm(-6, 14) |
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21 |
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>>> # Whoops!</lang> |
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It is out by any common factor. --[[User:Paddy3118|Paddy3118]] 03:17, 31 March 2011 (UTC) |
Revision as of 03:17, 31 March 2011
When I first wrote the task, I forgot about the special case for zero. I later added this special case to the task, but I left it as a draft task. --Kernigh 00:29, 31 March 2011 (UTC)
Yet another way, isn't?
From "Yet another way is to use rational arithmetic; if you add 1/m and 1/n and reduce the fraction, then the denominator is the lcm"
I did the following: <lang python>>>> def lcm(a, b): return (fractions.Fraction(1,a) + fractions.Fraction(1,b)).denominator if a and b else 0
>>> lcm(12, 18) 36 >>> lcm(-6, 14) 21 >>> # Whoops!</lang> It is out by any common factor. --Paddy3118 03:17, 31 March 2011 (UTC)