NAME
Math::Factor::XS - Factorize numbers and calculate matching multiplications
SYNOPSIS
use Math::Factor::XS ':all';
# or
use Math::Factor::XS qw(factors matches);
$number = 30107;
@factors = factors($number);
@matches = matches($number, \@factors);
print "$factors[1]\n";
print "$number == $matches[0][0] * $matches[0][1]\n";
DESCRIPTION
Math::Factor::XS factorizes numbers by applying trial divisions.
FUNCTIONS
factors
Factorizes numbers.
@factors = factors($number);
The number will be entirely factorized and its factors will be returned as a list.
matches
Calculates matching multiplications.
@matches = matches($number, \@factors, { skip_multiples => [0|1] });
The factors will be multiplicated against each other and all combinations that equal the number itself will be returned as a two-dimensional list. The matches are accessible through the indexes; for example, the first two numbers that matched the number may be accessed by $matches[0][0] and $matches[0][1], the second pair by $matches[1][0] and $matches[1][1], and so on.
The hashref provided at the end is optional. If skip_multiples is set to a true value, then matching multiplications that contain multiplicated small factors will be discarded. Example:
11 * 2737 == 30107 # accepted
77 * 391 == 30107 # discarded
Direct use of $Math::Factor::XS::Skip_multiple does no longer have an effect as it has been superseded by skip_multiples.
EXPORT
Functions
factors(), matches() are exportable.
Tags
:all - *()
AUTHOR
Steven Schubiger <schubiger@cpan.org>
LICENSE
This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.