Which is the fastest algorithm to find prime numbers?

后端 未结 14 1601
情深已故
情深已故 2020-11-22 06:49

Which is the fastest algorithm to find out prime numbers using C++? I have used sieve\'s algorithm but I still want it to be faster!

14条回答
  •  陌清茗
    陌清茗 (楼主)
    2020-11-22 07:13

    He, he I know I'm a question necromancer replying to old questions, but I've just found this question searching the net for ways to implement efficient prime numbers tests.

    Until now, I believe that the fastest prime number testing algorithm is Strong Probable Prime (SPRP). I am quoting from Nvidia CUDA forums:

    One of the more practical niche problems in number theory has to do with identification of prime numbers. Given N, how can you efficiently determine if it is prime or not? This is not just a thoeretical problem, it may be a real one needed in code, perhaps when you need to dynamically find a prime hash table size within certain ranges. If N is something on the order of 2^30, do you really want to do 30000 division tests to search for any factors? Obviously not.

    The common practical solution to this problem is a simple test called an Euler probable prime test, and a more powerful generalization called a Strong Probable Prime (SPRP). This is a test that for an integer N can probabilistically classify it as prime or not, and repeated tests can increase the correctness probability. The slow part of the test itself mostly involves computing a value similar to A^(N-1) modulo N. Anyone implementing RSA public-key encryption variants has used this algorithm. It's useful both for huge integers (like 512 bits) as well as normal 32 or 64 bit ints.

    The test can be changed from a probabilistic rejection into a definitive proof of primality by precomputing certain test input parameters which are known to always succeed for ranges of N. Unfortunately the discovery of these "best known tests" is effectively a search of a huge (in fact infinite) domain. In 1980, a first list of useful tests was created by Carl Pomerance (famous for being the one to factor RSA-129 with his Quadratic Seive algorithm.) Later Jaeschke improved the results significantly in 1993. In 2004, Zhang and Tang improved the theory and limits of the search domain. Greathouse and Livingstone have released the most modern results until now on the web, at http://math.crg4.com/primes.html, the best results of a huge search domain.

    See here for more info: http://primes.utm.edu/prove/prove2_3.html and http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=70483

    If you just need a way to generate very big prime numbers and don't care to generate all prime numbers < an integer n, you can use Lucas-Lehmer test to verify Mersenne prime numbers. A Mersenne prime number is in the form of 2^p -1. I think that Lucas-Lehmer test is the fastest algorithm discovered for Mersenne prime numbers.

    And if you not only want to use the fastest algorithm but also the fastest hardware, try to implement it using Nvidia CUDA, write a kernel for CUDA and run it on GPU.

    You can even earn some money if you discover large enough prime numbers, EFF is giving prizes from $50K to $250K: https://www.eff.org/awards/coop

提交回复
热议问题