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factor 50 #55
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Good morning, some ideas to write a standalone utility which could emulate GNU factor command when not available.
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Try your code with the number from my benchmark :) |
Alright, it's not ideal. Let's rethink. With bash arithmetic, I can't handle numbers as large as those accepted by the factor command, no bignum support, bound to intmax_t. But second take on a fast factorize placeholder routine (not bad):
We certainly could tweak more, like splitting strategies, however, one can write a fair placeholder, bash rumbling day. (Prime factors is an addictive topic). |
factor is not a bash built-in nor a bash plugin. It's a program in its own right, independent of bash, part of gnu coreutils, and is related to bash about as much as, say, a video- or music player is.
busybox provides a factor app too, alas it's much more limited in allowable number range than the coreutils version, which I tend to use as quick poor person's CPU benchmark:
time factor 1234567890123456789012345678901
As this yields two large prime factors, it takes a reasonable (as in measurable) time. Because the number is easy to memorize, and can be shortcut nicely with copy-and-paste, it serves as a nice rough evaluation of CPU performance - depending on machine between about 150ms for notebooks and desktop computers, to 400 to 1000 and above ms for ARM SBC. My WiFi router takes about 4 seconds, comparable to oldish ARM SBCs.
Nevertheless, factor still isn't related to bash.
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