Calculating very large exponents in python
casevh
casevh at gmail.com
Tue Mar 9 08:54:15 EST 2010
On Mar 8, 10:39 pm, casevh <cas... at gmail.com> wrote:
> [also replying to Geremy since the OP's message doesn't appear...]
>
> On Mar 8, 11:05 am, geremy condra <debat... at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On Mon, Mar 8, 2010 at 2:15 AM, Fahad Ahmad <miracles... at hotmail.com> wrote:
> > > Thanks Geremy,
>
> > > That has been an absolute bump........... GOD i cant sit on my chair, it has
> > > worked even on 512 bit number and with no time..........
> > > superb i would say.
>
> > > lastly, i am using the code below to calculate Largest Prime factor of a
> > > number:
>
> > > print
> > > ('''==============================================================================='''
> > > ''' CALCULATE HIGHEST PRIME
> > > FACTOR '''
>
> > > '''===============================================================================''')
>
> > > #!/usr/bin/env python
> > > def highest_prime_factor(n):
> > > if isprime(n):
> > > return n
> > > for x in xrange(2,n ** 0.5 + 1):
> > > if not n % x:
> > > return highest_prime_factor(n/x)
> > > def isprime(n):
> > > for x in xrange(2,n ** 0.5 + 1):
> > > if not n % x:
> > > return False
> > > return True
> > > if __name__ == "__main__":
> > > import time
> > > start = time.time()
> > > print highest_prime_factor(1238162376372637826)
> > > print time.time() - start
>
> > > the code works with a bit of delay on the number : "1238162376372637826" but
> > > extending it to
> > > (109026109913291424366305511581086089650628117463925776754560048454991130443047109026109913291424366305511581086089650628117463925776754560048454991130443047)
> > > makes python go crazy. Is there any way just like above, i can have it
> > > calculated it in no time.
>
> > > thanks for the support.
>
> > If you're just looking for the largest prime factor I would suggest using
> > a fermat factorization attack. In the example you gave, it returns
> > nearly immediately.
>
> > Geremy Condra- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> For a Python-based solution, you might want to look at pyecm (http://
> sourceforge.net/projects/pyecm/)
>
> On a system with gmpy installed also, pyecm found the following
> factors:
>
> 101, 521, 3121, 9901, 36479, 300623, 53397071018461,
> 1900381976777332243781
>
> There still is a 98 digit unfactored composite:
>
> 60252507174568243758911151187828438446814447653986842279796823262165159406500174226172705680274911
>
> Factoring this remaining composite using ECM may not be practical.
>
> casevh- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
After a few hours, the remaining factors are
6060517860310398033985611921721
and
9941808367425935774306988776021629111399536914790551022447994642391
casevh
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