1.3 KiB
1.3 KiB
Prime Factors
Welcome to Prime Factors on Exercism's Rust Track.
If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out HELP.md.
Instructions
Compute the prime factors of a given natural number.
A prime number is only evenly divisible by itself and 1.
Note that 1 is not a prime number.
Example
What are the prime factors of 60?
- Our first divisor is 2. 2 goes into 60, leaving 30.
- 2 goes into 30, leaving 15.
- 2 doesn't go cleanly into 15. So let's move on to our next divisor, 3.
- 3 goes cleanly into 15, leaving 5.
- 3 does not go cleanly into 5. The next possible factor is 4.
- 4 does not go cleanly into 5. The next possible factor is 5.
- 5 does go cleanly into 5.
- We're left only with 1, so now, we're done.
Our successful divisors in that computation represent the list of prime factors of 60: 2, 2, 3, and 5.
You can check this yourself:
2 * 2 * 3 * 5
= 4 * 15
= 60
Success!
Source
Created by
- @sacherjj
Contributed to by
- @attilahorvath
- @coriolinus
- @cwhakes
- @eddyp
- @efx
- @ErikSchierboom
- @lutostag
- @nathanielknight
- @nfiles
- @petertseng
- @rofrol
- @stringparser
- @xakon
- @ZapAnton
Based on
The Prime Factors Kata by Uncle Bob - https://web.archive.org/web/20221026171801/http://butunclebob.com/ArticleS.UncleBob.ThePrimeFactorsKata