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#12 | |
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May 2004
New York City
2×29×73 Posts |
Quote:
the numbers, and so made a GROSS, possibly erroneous generalization. (At least it wasn't prime ... though there may be other such words ...) Thanks for pointing this out. |
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#13 |
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6809 > 6502
"""""""""""""""""""
Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
23·1,223 Posts |
Mill, couple, Pair, brace, Dozen, Baker's dozen, Score, Gross, Great gross, Myriad, Avogadro's number (& mole) all fail, but are non standard names for numbers. I know that there are about a dozen others in English, however I can lay my hands on a list at present.
Last fiddled with by Uncwilly on 2008-06-17 at 22:05 |
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#14 |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
1100110001012 Posts |
In Dutch the names of numbers will be an excellent source of primes because the majority of all numbers (80% of them, all numbers n for which 20<=n<=99 mod 100) end in the letters ...TIG (...2097).
Edit: I think in German too all numbers n for 20<=n<=99 mod 100 end in IG (97). Last fiddled with by Brian-E on 2008-06-17 at 22:37 |
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#15 |
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Jan 2005
479 Posts |
First to be prime in dutch is: 58
achtenvijftig = 138205142291062097 = prime I'm betting there is a prime number - prime word too... |
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#16 |
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Cranksta Rap Ayatollah
Jul 2003
641 Posts |
Sweet, my name is prime
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#17 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
Quote:
163 is prime = honderddrieenzestig = 815144518441895514265192097 is prime |
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#18 |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
When you have nearly given up trying, you eventually find a prime sentence - but it's really hard work!
whenyouhavenearlygivenuptryingyoueventuallyfindaprimesentencebutitsreallyhardwork =2385142515218122514511812257922514211620182591472515215225142021112122569144116189135195142051435221209201918511212258118423151811 =prime Last fiddled with by Brian-E on 2008-06-18 at 21:03 |
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#19 | |
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Account Deleted
"Tim Sorbera"
Aug 2006
San Antonio, TX USA
17×251 Posts |
Quote:
Last fiddled with by Mini-Geek on 2008-06-18 at 21:23 Reason: removed tex tags like he did, so it doesn't run the screen so wide |
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#20 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7·467 Posts |
Quote:
Last fiddled with by Brian-E on 2008-06-18 at 21:41 Reason: Oh now this posting is redundant, haha. Must stop using the edit facility! |
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#21 |
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Oct 2006
10416 Posts |
twin primes = 20239141618913519 = prime
books = 215151119 = prime numbers = 142213251819 = not prime ![]() prime numbers = 16189135142213251819 = not prime ![]() Sentances will be interesting... |
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#22 |
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Mar 2008
25 Posts |
Leaving out the leading zeroes makes the encoded messages ambiguous. It would make more sense to put the leading zeroes in, such as: PRIME = 1618091305 (not prime)
Or, another encoding would be to use ASCII, and then read the word as a big integer, such as: PRIME = 80, 82, 73, 77, 69 80 * 256^4 + 82 * 256^3 + 73 * 256^2 + 77 * 256 + 69 = 344977919301 (not prime) In little-endian it would be: 69 * 256^4 + 77 * 256^3 + 73 * 256^2 + 82 * 256 + 80 = 297649394256 (not prime) |
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