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A prime number (or a prime) is a natural number greater than 1 that has no positive divisors other than 1 and itself.
R Language Code
prime = function(n)
{
n = as.integer(n)
if(n > 1e8) stop(“n too large”)
primes = rep(TRUE, n)
primes[1] = FALSE
last.prime = 2L
fsqr = floor(sqrt(n))
while (last.prime < = fsqr)
{
primes[seq.int(2L*last.prime, n, last.prime)] = FALSE
sel = which(primes[(last.prime+1):(fsqr+1)])
if(any(sel)){
last.prime = last.prime + min(sel)
}else last.prime = fsqr+1
}
which(primes)
}
To list out the primes within 100, simply type the command:
prime(100)
Now, question is
By listing the first six prime numbers: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, and 13, we can see that the 6th prime is 13.
What is the 10 001st prime number?
We simply accessing the elements of vector by using [ and ]
We first concatenate more than 10001 primes into prime2 variable by command prime(2000000). Then accessing the 10001st element of the vector and we get the 10001st prime number!
prime2 = prime(200000)
prime2[10001]
Enjoy ^^
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