Mohammed_Hamed8's blog

By Mohammed_Hamed8, history, 7 hours ago, In English

Body: I am solving this problem:1474B - Different Divisors

We need to find the smallest integer a such that:

a has at least 4 divisors the difference between any two divisors of a is at least d

My idea is to construct a as:

a = p⋅q

where:

p is the smallest prime such that p≥d+1 q is the smallest prime such that q≥p+d

Then I output a=p⋅q. 373450651

This works for all samples I tested, but I am not fully sure about correctness for all d. Can someone confirm if this construction is always optimal, or provide a counterexample if it fails?

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7 hours ago, hide # |
 
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Auto comment: topic has been updated by Mohammed_Hamed8 (previous revision, new revision, compare).

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5 hours ago, hide # |
 
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Yeah, it's correct because:

  • $$$a = p * q$$$ has exactly $$$4$$$ divisors, which are $$$1, p, q, p * q$$$

  • $$$p - 1 ≥ d$$$, $$$q - p ≥ d$$$, and $$$p * q - q = (p - 1) * q$$$. Because $$$p - 1 ≥ d$$$ so $$$(p - 1) * q ≥ d$$$

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96 minutes ago, hide # |
 
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p*q won't always be the smallest, there are cases where p*p*p might be the smallest ig, or, just to be safe?

I will try finding test cases for it