Prime numbers from 2 till hundred?

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Ahmad Omar
Ahmad Omar el 10 de Nov. de 2021
Respondida: Rushil el 29 de En. de 2025
How to use control flow statements that returns all the prime numbers from 2 till hundred?
  6 comentarios
Steven Lord
Steven Lord el 10 de Nov. de 2021
I'd classify most if not all of the functions in the Loops and Conditional Statements category in the documentation as control-flow statements. [return, parfor, and otherwise are the main additions to Walter's list. I mainly wanted to point out the existence of the category documentation pages.]
Jan
Jan el 11 de Nov. de 2021
Is the question meaningful? Is it possible to calculate prime numbers with control flow statements only, or without control flow statements? Maybe a flow chart is meant?

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Respuestas (1)

Rushil
Rushil el 29 de En. de 2025
Hi Ahmad
I believe that this task can be accomplished using a sieve of eratosthenes using control flow statements like for/if/continue etc. The sieve works in O(n log logn) time, which is usually fast enough for small values of “n” (in this case n=100). Below is the implementation of the algorithm, it stores all the prime numbers in the array “prime”:
n = 100; % range of numbers is [2,n]
prime = [];
is_pr = ones(1,n);
for i=2:n
if ~is_pr(i)
continue
end
prime = [prime i];
for j=2*i:i:n
is_pr(j) = 0;
end
end
prime
Since the task is concerned with using control flow statements, the above code finds all the primes in [2,n]. However, a more optimised approach may be to use the MATLAB function “primes”. You can read more about it here:
Hope it helped.
larush

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