@KaliMa after you've sieved to sqrt(max), you know where all of the primes are. You can use that information, and that of the existing divisors found to quickly find the rest of the divisors.
For each index i, the rest of the divisors can be found by dividing i by each divisor. Then you can use that to find all the prime divisors, because the prime divisors of i is the superset of the (prime divisiors of (each of it's nonprime-divisors)).
@KaliMa it'sway faster than iterating through the full list over and over and over.
I think
but I think that for all the cells > sqrt(max), you can calculate them based on the cells < sqrt(max), so you don't necessarily need to store the ones >sqrt(max) in memory. You can calculate them on an as-needed basis.
yeah, it should work.
Am I missing a step? I'm sortof working this out as I go
@KaliMa The more I think about it, the more I think if you need a complete list of all prime divisors that a pure sieve would be fastest, and that the division trick isn't helpful.
The stupid warning is firing because my class has a raw pointer. It's not an owning pointer, so the warning is moot. Value copy is fine in the odd case the assignment is needed.
@NolwennLeGuen He's Flemish. But, to be fair, I work with a Walloon, and seriously, at first I thought he was French. Until we started talking about beer.
So, it's either the accent or the arrogance that's the same.
@NolwennLeGuen Some do. There's a lame separatist party that got a lot of votes last election. The only real problem is that the two "sides" don't agree on just about everything, and there is a lot of money going one way without any guarantee of it being well-spent. Other than that, not much going on.
@rubenvb It was understandable but it doesn't sound correct. "Parole" doesn't fit in that context . But don't worry, I'm just being overly unnice, as usual.
@NolwennLeGuen Yeah. The guy couldn't shut up about how better the beer and fries were in Belgium. Fun thing was that he was doing so while really enjoying a poutine after getting himself drunk on beer.
Today I encountered a problem that involved an overlap (of the memory region) of the base class members and the sub class members. Do you have any spontaneous ideas why this can occur?