Had put stars into one of the bags instead of commas, old 'C'
programmer...
This commit is contained in:
parent
117312cae7
commit
3487ebe5ff
@ -165,7 +165,7 @@ For this prime factor to be preserved in the result
|
|||||||
of an addition, it must be in both summed quantities at an equal or greater power (or
|
of an addition, it must be in both summed quantities at an equal or greater power (or
|
||||||
number of duplicates of that prime in the bag).
|
number of duplicates of that prime in the bag).
|
||||||
%
|
%
|
||||||
Consider two numbers with $11^2$ in one number and $11$ in the other: $bpf(110)=\{11*2*5\}$
|
Consider two numbers with $11^2$ in one number and $11$ in the other: $bpf(110)=\{11,2,5\}$
|
||||||
and $bpf(67639)=\{13,11,11,43\}$. The only common prime factor is 11 once.
|
and $bpf(67639)=\{13,11,11,43\}$. The only common prime factor is 11 once.
|
||||||
%
|
%
|
||||||
%
|
%
|
||||||
@ -195,7 +195,9 @@ present in the result, i.e. $bpf(126324)=\{2,2,3,3,11,11,29\}$.
|
|||||||
%
|
%
|
||||||
This means for $a+b$ and $a^n+b^n$ the only prime factors preserved (i.e. in $c^n$)
|
This means for $a+b$ and $a^n+b^n$ the only prime factors preserved (i.e. in $c^n$)
|
||||||
are those common to $a$ and $b$.
|
are those common to $a$ and $b$.
|
||||||
|
Another way to look at this is the number of common prime factors is multiplied by
|
||||||
|
the addition in the brackets.
|
||||||
|
%% BONFIRE OF THE PRIMES:wq
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
\subsection{Conditions for having a integer root}
|
\subsection{Conditions for having a integer root}
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user