Math Terminology Questions
- Robert_S
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Math Terminology Questions
So, I'm learning the Python programming language and was doing the standard exercise of testing for primeness and listing all the primes from here to there and that got me thinking about the composites and their relationship to the primes which led to looking for interesting patterns in the output my little scripts generate and also on the web.
I found that I lack in terminology when it comes to maths, so I'm asking here as things come up.
What is the term for how many primes a number can be divided by?
What is the term for how many primes and non primes a number can be divided by and the ratio of the two?
I noticed that if a number is divisible by a large amount of other numbers, a prime number can often be found a prime number of numbers up or down from it.* How do I express this in a less confusing way? Has someone else come up with a name for this?
This program I'm going to write will take smallish primes at random and keep multiplying them together until the heap is as high as 3 million or so, then I'll call the number Compost, then test for primeness in the numbers I get by adding or subtracting prime numbers to and from Compost.
Is there a name for this kind of algorithm?
*I think this is related to Euclid's(?) proof of the infinitude of primes. Don't tell me how though, I want to figure it out.
I found that I lack in terminology when it comes to maths, so I'm asking here as things come up.
What is the term for how many primes a number can be divided by?
What is the term for how many primes and non primes a number can be divided by and the ratio of the two?
I noticed that if a number is divisible by a large amount of other numbers, a prime number can often be found a prime number of numbers up or down from it.* How do I express this in a less confusing way? Has someone else come up with a name for this?
This program I'm going to write will take smallish primes at random and keep multiplying them together until the heap is as high as 3 million or so, then I'll call the number Compost, then test for primeness in the numbers I get by adding or subtracting prime numbers to and from Compost.
Is there a name for this kind of algorithm?
*I think this is related to Euclid's(?) proof of the infinitude of primes. Don't tell me how though, I want to figure it out.
What I've found with a few discussions I've had lately is this self-satisfaction that people express with their proffessed open mindedness. In realty it ammounts to wilful ignorance and intellectual cowardice as they are choosing to not form any sort of opinion on a particular topic. Basically "I don't know and I'm not going to look at any evidence because I'm quite happy on this fence."
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
An interesting question, Robert. Without being specific about the terminology, I am going to do a cut and paste of an introduction to a project on primes and factors that I give to my advanced maths students. It is really about finding the total number of factors a composite number has, which masy only have a peripheral bearing on your issues...
In this area of mathematics, we are only interested in the natural numbers (positive whole numbers from one upwards). Prime numbers (2, 3, 5, 7 etc.) are natural numbers whose only factors are one and themselves. Composite numbers have at least one pair of factors other than one and themselves. If m is a composite number, then it can be written as a product:
m = a x b
where a and b are numbers greater than 1 and less than m
To find whether a number is prime, we need to try dividing it by prime numbers smaller than itself. Here is a useful shortcut – first find an approximate square root of the number. For example, 89
This means that we need only try to divide 89 by prime numbers smaller than 9 (so, 2, 3, 5, 7) Since 89 cannot be divided by any of these, it is a prime number.
Prime Factors
We can write any number as a product of its prime factors. This process is called prime decomposition. If there is more than one of a particular prime factor, it is usually written in index form. Also, the smaller primes are always written first. Examples:
77 = 7 x 11
72 = 8 x 9
= 2 x 2 x 2 x 3 x 3
= 23 x 32
2000 = 16 x 25
= 24 x 52
Repeated division, starting with the smallest possible prime, is a sensible method for large numbers. For example, to find the prime factors of 1512
2 1512
2 756
2 378
3 189
3 63
3 21
7 7
1512 = 23 x 33 x 7
Total number of factors (Tn)
It can be important to know the total number of factors that can divide into a particular composite number (including one and itself). Sometimes we need to list them all out, but sometimes we only need to know how many there are. For small numbers, it is not hard to list them, and then count:
72 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 72 So, 72 has a total of 12 factors.
This would be awkward and time consuming for large numbers. Fortunately, there is a short cut, which depends on first working out the prime factors, as shown earlier. We use a general formula:
If the prime factors of a certain number are an1 x bn2 x cn3...
Then:
Tn = (n1 + 1)(n2 +1)(n3 + 1)...
Let’s check 72, which can be written as 23 x 32
Tn = (3 + 1)(2 + 1) = 4 x 3 = 12 which is correct
In this area of mathematics, we are only interested in the natural numbers (positive whole numbers from one upwards). Prime numbers (2, 3, 5, 7 etc.) are natural numbers whose only factors are one and themselves. Composite numbers have at least one pair of factors other than one and themselves. If m is a composite number, then it can be written as a product:
m = a x b
where a and b are numbers greater than 1 and less than m
To find whether a number is prime, we need to try dividing it by prime numbers smaller than itself. Here is a useful shortcut – first find an approximate square root of the number. For example, 89
This means that we need only try to divide 89 by prime numbers smaller than 9 (so, 2, 3, 5, 7) Since 89 cannot be divided by any of these, it is a prime number.
Prime Factors
We can write any number as a product of its prime factors. This process is called prime decomposition. If there is more than one of a particular prime factor, it is usually written in index form. Also, the smaller primes are always written first. Examples:
77 = 7 x 11
72 = 8 x 9
= 2 x 2 x 2 x 3 x 3
= 23 x 32
2000 = 16 x 25
= 24 x 52
Repeated division, starting with the smallest possible prime, is a sensible method for large numbers. For example, to find the prime factors of 1512
2 1512
2 756
2 378
3 189
3 63
3 21
7 7
1512 = 23 x 33 x 7
Total number of factors (Tn)
It can be important to know the total number of factors that can divide into a particular composite number (including one and itself). Sometimes we need to list them all out, but sometimes we only need to know how many there are. For small numbers, it is not hard to list them, and then count:
72 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 12, 18, 24, 36, 72 So, 72 has a total of 12 factors.
This would be awkward and time consuming for large numbers. Fortunately, there is a short cut, which depends on first working out the prime factors, as shown earlier. We use a general formula:
If the prime factors of a certain number are an1 x bn2 x cn3...
Then:
Tn = (n1 + 1)(n2 +1)(n3 + 1)...
Let’s check 72, which can be written as 23 x 32
Tn = (3 + 1)(2 + 1) = 4 x 3 = 12 which is correct
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Bookmarking this... Thanks, Jim!
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Thanks Jim.
I figured that there had to be an ever lowering top bound for factors to live in because if our candidate for primeness: X is not divisible by 2, then you eliminate all divisors in the top half, if 3, you eliminate the top 2/3rds... yielding a pattern of: Test for Y divisibility then, if negative, eliminate all numbers greater than or equal to (1/Y)X.
Inspiration came when looking at 2,000,016 with an impressive 118 factors, none of which are 13, and seeing 2,000,029 (+13) and 2,000,003 (-13) being prime.
I figured that there had to be an ever lowering top bound for factors to live in because if our candidate for primeness: X is not divisible by 2, then you eliminate all divisors in the top half, if 3, you eliminate the top 2/3rds... yielding a pattern of: Test for Y divisibility then, if negative, eliminate all numbers greater than or equal to (1/Y)X.
Update: I'm renaming my Compost variable to c and writing this script it to exclude one or two lowish (say, less than 47) primes at random and call it P then test for primeness in C + p and C - p.Robert_S wrote: This program I'm going to write will take smallish primes at random and keep multiplying them together until the heap is as high as 3 million or so, then I'll call the number Compost, then test for primeness in the numbers I get by adding or subtracting prime numbers to and from Compost.
Is there a name for this kind of algorithm?
*I think this is related to Euclid's(?) proof of the infinitude of primes. Don't tell me how though, I want to figure it out.
Inspiration came when looking at 2,000,016 with an impressive 118 factors, none of which are 13, and seeing 2,000,029 (+13) and 2,000,003 (-13) being prime.
What I've found with a few discussions I've had lately is this self-satisfaction that people express with their proffessed open mindedness. In realty it ammounts to wilful ignorance and intellectual cowardice as they are choosing to not form any sort of opinion on a particular topic. Basically "I don't know and I'm not going to look at any evidence because I'm quite happy on this fence."
-Mr P
The Net is best considered analogous to communication with disincarnate intelligences. As any neophyte would tell you. Do not invoke that which you have no facility to banish.
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The Net is best considered analogous to communication with disincarnate intelligences. As any neophyte would tell you. Do not invoke that which you have no facility to banish.
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Keep us posted of your results. I like this form of experimental mathematics!Robert_S wrote:Thanks Jim.
I figured that there had to be an ever lowering top bound for factors to live in because if our candidate for primeness: X is not divisible by 2, then you eliminate all divisors in the top half, if 3, you eliminate the top 2/3rds... yielding a pattern of: Test for Y divisibility then, if negative, eliminate all numbers greater than or equal to (1/Y)X.
Update: I'm renaming my Compost variable to c and writing this script it to exclude one or two lowish (say, less than 47) primes at random and call it P then test for primeness in C + p and C - p.Robert_S wrote: This program I'm going to write will take smallish primes at random and keep multiplying them together until the heap is as high as 3 million or so, then I'll call the number Compost, then test for primeness in the numbers I get by adding or subtracting prime numbers to and from Compost.
Is there a name for this kind of algorithm?
*I think this is related to Euclid's(?) proof of the infinitude of primes. Don't tell me how though, I want to figure it out.
Inspiration came when looking at 2,000,016 with an impressive 118 factors, none of which are 13, and seeing 2,000,029 (+13) and 2,000,003 (-13) being prime.
(but I have no programming skills to pursue them)
The problems I set my students after the introduction I posted earlier include finding, for example, the smallest number that has exactly 20 factors...
(bearing in mind that there are, of course, an infinite number of numbers that have 20 factors...)
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Isn't that just the product of the twenty smallest primes? 2 x 3 x 5 x 7 x 11 x 13 x 17 x 19 x 23 x 29 x 31 x 37 x 41 x 43 x 47 x 51 x 53 x 59 x 61 x 67 = 400,774,399,105,093,619,849,833,590JimC wrote:Keep us posted of your results. I like this form of experimental mathematics!Robert_S wrote:Thanks Jim.
I figured that there had to be an ever lowering top bound for factors to live in because if our candidate for primeness: X is not divisible by 2, then you eliminate all divisors in the top half, if 3, you eliminate the top 2/3rds... yielding a pattern of: Test for Y divisibility then, if negative, eliminate all numbers greater than or equal to (1/Y)X.
Update: I'm renaming my Compost variable to c and writing this script it to exclude one or two lowish (say, less than 47) primes at random and call it P then test for primeness in C + p and C - p.Robert_S wrote: This program I'm going to write will take smallish primes at random and keep multiplying them together until the heap is as high as 3 million or so, then I'll call the number Compost, then test for primeness in the numbers I get by adding or subtracting prime numbers to and from Compost.
Is there a name for this kind of algorithm?
*I think this is related to Euclid's(?) proof of the infinitude of primes. Don't tell me how though, I want to figure it out.
Inspiration came when looking at 2,000,016 with an impressive 118 factors, none of which are 13, and seeing 2,000,029 (+13) and 2,000,003 (-13) being prime.
(but I have no programming skills to pursue them)
The problems I set my students after the introduction I posted earlier include finding, for example, the smallest number that has exactly 20 factors...
(bearing in mind that there are, of course, an infinite number of numbers that have 20 factors...)
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Nope. 219 = 524,288: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16,384, 32,768, 65,536, 131,072, 262,144, 524,288 is a lot smaller.JOZeldenrust wrote:Isn't that just the product of the twenty smallest primes? 2 x 3 x 5 x 7 x 11 x 13 x 17 x 19 x 23 x 29 x 31 x 37 x 41 x 43 x 47 x 51 x 53 x 59 x 61 x 67 = 400,774,399,105,093,619,849,833,590JimC wrote:Keep us posted of your results. I like this form of experimental mathematics!Robert_S wrote:Thanks Jim.
I figured that there had to be an ever lowering top bound for factors to live in because if our candidate for primeness: X is not divisible by 2, then you eliminate all divisors in the top half, if 3, you eliminate the top 2/3rds... yielding a pattern of: Test for Y divisibility then, if negative, eliminate all numbers greater than or equal to (1/Y)X.
Update: I'm renaming my Compost variable to c and writing this script it to exclude one or two lowish (say, less than 47) primes at random and call it P then test for primeness in C + p and C - p.Robert_S wrote: This program I'm going to write will take smallish primes at random and keep multiplying them together until the heap is as high as 3 million or so, then I'll call the number Compost, then test for primeness in the numbers I get by adding or subtracting prime numbers to and from Compost.
Is there a name for this kind of algorithm?
*I think this is related to Euclid's(?) proof of the infinitude of primes. Don't tell me how though, I want to figure it out.
Inspiration came when looking at 2,000,016 with an impressive 118 factors, none of which are 13, and seeing 2,000,029 (+13) and 2,000,003 (-13) being prime.
(but I have no programming skills to pursue them)
The problems I set my students after the introduction I posted earlier include finding, for example, the smallest number that has exactly 20 factors...
(bearing in mind that there are, of course, an infinite number of numbers that have 20 factors...)
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
I think the smallest number with 20 factors is 240 = 24.31.51 - by Jim's formula Tn = (4 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 5 x 2 x 2 = 20. Can't be arsed to work them all out though! 

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Re: Math Terminology Questions
1. 1 x 240Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I think the smallest number with 20 factors is 240 = 24.31.51 - by Jim's formula Tn = (4 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 5 x 2 x 2 = 20. Can't be arsed to work them all out though!
2. 2 x 120
3. 3 x 80
4. 4 x 60
5. 5 x 48
6. 6 x 40
7. 8 x 30
8. 10 x 24
9. 12 x 20
10. 15 x 16
11. 16 x 15
12. 20 x 12
13. 24 x 10
14. 30 x 8
15. 40 x 6
16. 48 x 5
17. 60 x 4
18. 80 x 3
19. 120 x 2
20. 240 x 1
I misunderstood the question, thinking it was about unique prime divisors. Thanks for clearing that up.
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
420 has 24 factors. (2 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 3 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 24JOZeldenrust wrote:1. 1 x 240Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I think the smallest number with 20 factors is 240 = 24.31.51 - by Jim's formula Tn = (4 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 5 x 2 x 2 = 20. Can't be arsed to work them all out though!
2. 2 x 120
3. 3 x 80
4. 4 x 60
5. 5 x 48
6. 6 x 40
7. 8 x 30
8. 10 x 24
9. 12 x 20
10. 15 x 16
11. 16 x 15
12. 20 x 12
13. 24 x 10
14. 30 x 8
15. 40 x 6
16. 48 x 5
17. 60 x 4
18. 80 x 3
19. 120 x 2
20. 240 x 1
I misunderstood the question, thinking it was about unique prime divisors. Thanks for clearing that up. You're right, by the way. The next smallest number with 20 factors is 420 = 22.31.51.71
The next smallest with 20 factors is 336 = 24.31.71
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Found that out right after I posted it, hence the edit. Thanks for preserving my stupidity.Xamonas Chegwé wrote:420 has 24 factors. (2 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 3 x 2 x 2 x 2 = 24JOZeldenrust wrote:1. 1 x 240Xamonas Chegwé wrote:I think the smallest number with 20 factors is 240 = 24.31.51 - by Jim's formula Tn = (4 + 1)(1 + 1)(1 + 1) = 5 x 2 x 2 = 20. Can't be arsed to work them all out though!
2. 2 x 120
3. 3 x 80
4. 4 x 60
5. 5 x 48
6. 6 x 40
7. 8 x 30
8. 10 x 24
9. 12 x 20
10. 15 x 16
11. 16 x 15
12. 20 x 12
13. 24 x 10
14. 30 x 8
15. 40 x 6
16. 48 x 5
17. 60 x 4
18. 80 x 3
19. 120 x 2
20. 240 x 1
I misunderstood the question, thinking it was about unique prime divisors. Thanks for clearing that up. You're right, by the way. The next smallest number with 20 factors is 420 = 22.31.51.71
The next smallest with 20 factors is 336 = 24.31.71
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Doing well, guys!
This is the sort of maths problem I like to set for my Year 9 Advanced Maths lads. It is open ended, and part of the deal is that they have to discuss the methods that they use. The interesting thing is that the more factors the original number (the one that is the "number of factors", like 20) has, the harder it is to be sure you have found the smallest number that has that number of factors.
If I'm not stretching their abilities, and stretching them hard, I am not doing my job...

This is the sort of maths problem I like to set for my Year 9 Advanced Maths lads. It is open ended, and part of the deal is that they have to discuss the methods that they use. The interesting thing is that the more factors the original number (the one that is the "number of factors", like 20) has, the harder it is to be sure you have found the smallest number that has that number of factors.
If I'm not stretching their abilities, and stretching them hard, I am not doing my job...
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
There might be some method for testing that, something that the original numbers have in common, or that the non-original numbers have in common.JimC wrote:The interesting thing is that the more factors the original number (the one that is the "number of factors", like 20) has, the harder it is to be sure you have found the smallest number that has that number of factors.
Or there might be a way of constructing this number.
Right now I'm having a problem with a function I wrote that works well from a command line but freezes up in a script.
Jim, what computer platform do you use?
What I've found with a few discussions I've had lately is this self-satisfaction that people express with their proffessed open mindedness. In realty it ammounts to wilful ignorance and intellectual cowardice as they are choosing to not form any sort of opinion on a particular topic. Basically "I don't know and I'm not going to look at any evidence because I'm quite happy on this fence."
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
Very ordinary, Robert - a mid-range PC running Windows Vista, and IE for my browser. Many people on the forum will do an eye-roll at such a pedestrian choice...Robert_S wrote:There might be some method for testing that, something that the original numbers have in common, or that the non-original numbers have in common.JimC wrote:The interesting thing is that the more factors the original number (the one that is the "number of factors", like 20) has, the harder it is to be sure you have found the smallest number that has that number of factors.
Or there might be a way of constructing this number.
Right now I'm having a problem with a function I wrote that works well from a command line but freezes up in a script.
Jim, what computer platform do you use?

I do no programming at all, though I can do some useful things with Excel using look-up tables and "if" formulae; that's about my limit.
Put your problem in the tech section, and one of our mavens like Pappa or klr might know... There is also the Programmer's Only thread...
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Re: Math Terminology Questions
If you were running Mac or Linux, you could do some interesting things with a small vocabulary in Python, Perl or other languages without having to install anything.
But I think you can do pretty much the same things with spreadsheets, which fall just a bit shy of being Turing complete because they complain about some of the more interesting kinds of loops. But the visual aid of the grid layout makes up for it in part. I've used them quite a bit, but never for anything financial.
But I think you can do pretty much the same things with spreadsheets, which fall just a bit shy of being Turing complete because they complain about some of the more interesting kinds of loops. But the visual aid of the grid layout makes up for it in part. I've used them quite a bit, but never for anything financial.
What I've found with a few discussions I've had lately is this self-satisfaction that people express with their proffessed open mindedness. In realty it ammounts to wilful ignorance and intellectual cowardice as they are choosing to not form any sort of opinion on a particular topic. Basically "I don't know and I'm not going to look at any evidence because I'm quite happy on this fence."
-Mr P
The Net is best considered analogous to communication with disincarnate intelligences. As any neophyte would tell you. Do not invoke that which you have no facility to banish.
Audley Strange
-Mr P
The Net is best considered analogous to communication with disincarnate intelligences. As any neophyte would tell you. Do not invoke that which you have no facility to banish.
Audley Strange
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