analyze-prime-numbers
À propos
Cette compétence propose des algorithmes pour l'analyse des nombres premiers, incluant des tests de primalité, la factorisation et des calculs de distribution. Elle met en œuvre des méthodes telles que Miller-Rabin, la division par essais et le Crible d'Ératosthène pour des tâches comme vérifier la primalité, trouver des facteurs ou lister les nombres premiers dans une limite. Utilisez-la pour des calculs de théorie des nombres, des preuves ou toute tâche de développement nécessitant des opérations sur les nombres premiers.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/analyze-prime-numbersCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Analyze Prime Numbers
Analyze prime numbers by selecting and applying the appropriate algorithm for the task at hand: primality testing, integer factorization, or prime distribution analysis. Verify results computationally and relate findings to the Prime Number Theorem.
When to Use
- Determining whether a given integer is prime or composite
- Finding the complete prime factorization of an integer
- Counting or listing primes up to a given bound
- Verifying the Prime Number Theorem approximation for a specific range
- Investigating properties of primes in a number-theoretic proof or computation
Inputs
- Required: The integer(s) to analyze, or a bound for distribution analysis
- Required: Task type -- one of: primality test, factorization, or distribution analysis
- Optional: Preferred algorithm (trial division, Miller-Rabin, Sieve of Eratosthenes, Pollard's rho)
- Optional: Whether to produce a formal proof of primality or a computational verdict
- Optional: Output format (factor tree, prime list, count, table)
Procedure
Step 1: Determine the Task Type
Classify the request into one of three categories and select the appropriate algorithmic path.
- Primality test: Given a single integer n, determine whether n is prime.
- Factorization: Given a composite integer n, find its complete prime factorization.
- Distribution analysis: Given a bound N, analyze the primes up to N (count, list, gaps, density).
Record the task type and the input value(s).
Got: A clear classification with the input values recorded.
If fail: If the input is ambiguous (e.g., "analyze 60"), ask the user to clarify whether they want a primality test, factorization, or distribution analysis. Default to factorization for composite numbers and primality confirmation for suspected primes.
Step 2: Apply Primality Testing (if task = primality)
Test whether n is prime using an algorithm matched to the size of n.
-
Handle trivial cases: n < 2 is not prime. n = 2 or n = 3 is prime. If n is even and n > 2, it is composite.
-
Small n (n < 10^6): Use trial division.
- Test divisibility by all primes p up to floor(sqrt(n)).
- Optimization: test 2, then odd numbers 3, 5, 7, ... or use a 6k +/- 1 wheel.
- If no divisor found, n is prime.
-
Large n (n >= 10^6): Use Miller-Rabin probabilistic test.
- Write n - 1 = 2^s * d where d is odd.
- For each witness a in {2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37}:
- Compute x = a^d mod n.
- If x = 1 or x = n - 1, this witness passes.
- Otherwise, square x up to s - 1 times. If x ever equals n - 1, pass.
- If no pass, n is composite (a is a witness).
- For n < 3.317 * 10^24, the witnesses {2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37} give a deterministic result.
-
Record the verdict: prime or composite, with the witness or certificate.
Small primes reference (first 25):
| Index | Prime | Index | Prime | Index | Prime |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 10 | 29 | 19 | 67 |
| 2 | 3 | 11 | 31 | 20 | 71 |
| 3 | 5 | 12 | 37 | 21 | 73 |
| 4 | 7 | 13 | 41 | 22 | 79 |
| 5 | 11 | 14 | 43 | 23 | 83 |
| 6 | 13 | 15 | 47 | 24 | 89 |
| 7 | 17 | 16 | 53 | 25 | 97 |
| 8 | 19 | 17 | 59 | ||
| 9 | 23 | 18 | 61 |
Got: A definitive answer (prime or composite) with the algorithm used and any witnesses or divisors found.
If fail: If Miller-Rabin reports "probably prime" but certainty is required, escalate to a deterministic test (e.g., AKS or ECPP). For trial division, if computation is too slow, switch to Miller-Rabin.
Step 3: Apply Factorization (if task = factorization)
Factor n completely into its prime power decomposition.
-
Extract small factors by trial division:
- Divide out 2 as many times as possible, recording the exponent.
- Divide out odd primes 3, 5, 7, 11, ... up to a cutoff (e.g., 10^4 or sqrt(n) if n is small).
- After each division, update n to the remaining cofactor.
-
If cofactor > 1 and cofactor < 10^12: Continue trial division up to sqrt(cofactor).
-
If cofactor > 1 and cofactor >= 10^12: Apply Pollard's rho algorithm.
- Choose f(x) = x^2 + c (mod n) with random c.
- Use Floyd's cycle detection: x = f(x), y = f(f(y)).
- Compute d = gcd(|x - y|, n) at each step.
- If 1 < d < n, d is a non-trivial factor. Recurse on d and n/d.
- If d = n, retry with a different c.
-
Verify: Multiply all found prime factors (with exponents) and confirm the product equals the original n. Test each factor for primality.
-
Present the result in standard form: n = p1^a1 * p2^a2 * ... * pk^ak with p1 < p2 < ... < pk.
Algorithm complexity notes:
| Algorithm | Complexity | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Trial division | O(sqrt(n)) | n < 10^12 |
| Pollard's rho | O(n^{1/4}) expected | n up to ~10^18 |
| Quadratic sieve | L(n)^{1+o(1)} | n up to ~10^50 |
| GNFS | L(n)^{(64/9)^{1/3}+o(1)} | n > 10^50 |
Got: A complete prime factorization in canonical form, verified by multiplication.
If fail: If Pollard's rho fails to find a factor after many iterations (cycle detected without a non-trivial gcd), try different values of c (at least 5 attempts). If all fail, the cofactor may be prime -- confirm with a primality test.
Step 4: Apply Distribution Analysis (if task = distribution)
Analyze the distribution of primes up to a given bound N.
-
Generate primes using the Sieve of Eratosthenes:
- Create a boolean array of size N + 1, initialized to true.
- Set indices 0 and 1 to false (not prime).
- For each p from 2 to floor(sqrt(N)):
- If p is still marked true, mark all multiples p^2, p^2 + p, p^2 + 2p, ... as false.
- Collect all indices still marked true.
-
Count primes: Compute pi(N) = number of primes up to N.
-
Compare with the Prime Number Theorem:
- PNT approximation: pi(N) ~ N / ln(N).
- Logarithmic integral approximation: Li(N) = integral from 2 to N of 1/ln(t) dt.
- Compute the relative error: |pi(N) - N/ln(N)| / pi(N).
-
Analyze prime gaps (optional):
- Compute gaps between consecutive primes.
- Report the maximum gap, average gap, and any twin primes (gap = 2).
- Average gap near N is approximately ln(N).
-
Present findings in a summary table:
Bound N: 1,000,000
pi(N): 78,498
N/ln(N): 72,382
Li(N): 78,628
Relative error (N/ln(N)): 7.79%
Relative error (Li(N)): 0.17%
Max prime gap: 148 (between 492113 and 492227)
Twin primes: 8,169 pairs
Got: A count of primes with PNT comparison and optional gap analysis.
If fail: If N is too large for in-memory sieving (N > 10^9), use a segmented sieve that processes the range in blocks. If only a count is needed (not a list), use the Meissel-Lehmer algorithm for pi(N) directly.
Step 5: Verify Results Computationally
Cross-check all results using an independent computation method.
-
For primality: If trial division was used, verify with a quick Miller-Rabin pass (or vice versa). For known primes, check against published prime tables or OEIS sequences.
-
For factorization: Multiply all factors and confirm equality with the original input. Independently test each claimed prime factor for primality.
-
For distribution: Spot-check by testing 3-5 individual numbers from the sieve output for primality. Compare pi(N) against published values for standard benchmarks (pi(10^k) for k = 1, ..., 9).
Published values of pi(N):
| N | pi(N) |
|---|---|
| 10 | 4 |
| 100 | 25 |
| 1,000 | 168 |
| 10,000 | 1,229 |
| 100,000 | 9,592 |
| 10^6 | 78,498 |
| 10^7 | 664,579 |
| 10^8 | 5,761,455 |
| 10^9 | 50,847,534 |
- Document the verification with the method used and the outcome.
Got: All results independently verified with no discrepancies.
If fail: If verification reveals a discrepancy, re-run the original computation with extra checks enabled (e.g., verbose trial division logging). The most common errors are off-by-one in sieve bounds, integer overflow in modular arithmetic, and mistaking a pseudoprime for a prime.
Validation
- Task type is correctly classified (primality, factorization, or distribution)
- Algorithm is appropriate for the input size
- Trivial cases (n < 2, n = 2, even n) are handled before general algorithms
- Primality verdicts are definitive (not "probably prime" without qualification)
- Factorizations multiply back to the original number
- Every claimed prime factor has been tested for primality
- Sieve bounds include sqrt(N) coverage for marking composites
- PNT comparison uses the correct formula (N/ln(N) or Li(N))
- Results are verified by an independent method or against published values
- Edge cases (n = 0, 1, 2, negative inputs) are addressed
Pitfalls
-
Forgetting n = 1 is not prime: By convention, 1 is neither prime nor composite. Many algorithms silently misclassify it.
-
Integer overflow in modular exponentiation: When computing a^d mod n for Miller-Rabin, naive exponentiation overflows. Use modular exponentiation (repeated squaring with mod at each step).
-
Sieve off-by-one errors: The sieve must mark composites starting from p^2, not from 2p. Starting from 2p wastes time but is correct; starting from p+1 is wrong.
-
Pollard's rho cycle with d = n: If gcd(|x - y|, n) = n, the algorithm has found the trivial factor. Retry with a different polynomial constant c, not a different starting point.
-
Carmichael numbers fooling Fermat's test: Numbers like 561 = 3 * 11 * 17 pass Fermat's primality test for all coprime bases. Always use Miller-Rabin, not plain Fermat.
-
Confusing pi(n) with the constant pi: The prime counting function pi(n) and the circle constant 3.14159... share notation. Context must be unambiguous.
Related Skills
solve-modular-arithmetic-- Modular arithmetic underpins Miller-Rabin and many factorization methodsexplore-diophantine-equations-- Prime factorization is a prerequisite for solving many Diophantine equationsformulate-quantum-problem-- Shor's algorithm for integer factorization connects primes to quantum computing
Dépôt GitHub
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