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#23 |
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Jun 2003
2·3·7·112 Posts |
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#24 |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
It seems that a positive result (factor) can be quickly verified. The proverbial difficulty of proving a negative (prime), at least by means of TF, should apply here.
EDIT: .....and TF returns no residue to match or mismatch. Last fiddled with by kladner on 2016-08-20 at 06:59 |
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#25 |
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Jun 2003
117328 Posts |
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#26 |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
230478 Posts |
OK, you're correct. It /proves/ nothing in the case of a negative result. If, on the other hand, a positive (a find) comes in when someone else reported a negative, that proves that the original run wasn't good.
And, a bit like science, negatives can't be proven. However, two independent runs reporting a negative reinforces the probability of a negative. Mark did quite a bit of this kind of work a little while ago. |
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#27 | |
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Serpentine Vermin Jar
Jul 2014
63618 Posts |
Quote:
a) make sure it's really a factor b) make sure it's a prime factor Only prime factors get added to the official "factor" list and it seems like that was the case here. Why that client reported a composite factor in the first place... call it a bug in the client I guess? Weird. |
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#28 | |
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"/X\(‘-‘)/X\"
Jan 2013
55628 Posts |
Quote:
1583285088503372039: 60071849 26356523311 |
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#29 | |
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Serpentine Vermin Jar
Jul 2014
3,313 Posts |
Quote:
Code:
M7508981 has a factor: 1583285088503372039 [TF:60:61*:mfakto 0.15pre2-Win cl_barrett15_69_gs_4] Seems to me the server probably should have rejected this as "not needed" and probably not give any credit for discovering a composite factor that is the result of two previously known prime factors. Otherwise everyone would just submit composite factors using known info and while it won't show up as a new factor, they may get credit for it anyway. Hmm... don't get any ideas... Last fiddled with by Madpoo on 2016-08-23 at 15:41 |
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#30 |
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Jun 2003
2·3·7·112 Posts |
It is cheaper to trail divide by some composite factors rather than making sure that each of them is a prime. I believe even P95 behavior will be the same. This is best dealt with at server side.
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#31 | |
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"/X\(‘-‘)/X\"
Jan 2013
2×5×293 Posts |
Quote:
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#32 |
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Einyen
Dec 2003
Denmark
C5616 Posts |
It would be nice if it could do a quick PRP test or maybe a few tests once it finds a factor, and report that the factor is composite or PRP. That would not interfere with "normal" operation, if it is only when a factor is found.
Last fiddled with by ATH on 2016-08-23 at 18:47 |
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#33 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
32×29×37 Posts |
To clarify Madpoo's post, there was a guy in the past (Alex? Axon? Sorry if I don't remember the right name and I confuse him with some honest contributor) who used to report small composite P-1 factors and do lots of P-1 credit, but then George penalized him by reverting the sign of his P-1 credit
(so he still had to do "honest" work to come to zero credit). Then George fixed the problem. Now the server should NOT accept composite factors. Also, all composite factors were eliminated at that time (discussion still on the forum somewhere). Whatever composite factors are still there, they escaped unchecked from that time, but I honestly don't believe so, my feeling is that the issue may be caused by a recent "merge" of some old factor list into the data base. Madpoo, did you do such a merge recently?
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