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back to boardquestion (+) Posted by vav[14] 13 Feb 2009 21:35 Is it true that k=f(n), where f(n) is Euler function? Edited by author 13.02.2009 22:03 Re: question(+) Yes =) 2 ADMINS: don't delete this hint. Really, it's easy to think it out - harder is to write Re: question(+) If anyone got stuck with this. here is the well-known formula for computing phi function: phi(n) = product of [ p^{a - 1} * (p - 1) ], where factorized n = product [ p^a ]. The problem has a pretty fast brute force solution. Once you find a number K such that (K + 1) is prime and K divides phi(n) try to construct n with this prime (multiply by (K + 1) once and continue while phi(n) / (K + 1)^b is a multiple of (K + 1)). |
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