I found Prime95 many years ago and have since checked up on the prime number search from time to time, which I just did recently. The largest prime found so far is over 22 million digits long. The next 2 prizes are for a 100 million digit prime and a billion digit prime. I have been trying to wrap my head around those number and just can't get there. I need someone to tell me how big those numbers are in terms I can understand, like Gigabytes. I started the download for the file "A billion digits of PI" and saw that a representation of a billion digits, using 8 bits per digit, was, if I recall, 954MB. I did not complete the download, just started it, checked the size, copied the .PART file and hex edited it to see the format, by the way. It was single digits, one period, standard ASCII and no file header or apparent overhead, in the beginning anyway.
So, here are my questions. Are there really about a billion digits worth of bits times 8 on my terabyte hard drive? And how would you represent a number with a billion digits in a term I could comprehend? I'm not even sure how multiplication or division would effect that exactly. I suppose I'm going to have to break it into "chunks" (like 1,000 x 1,000 x 1,000 etc.) to get the base number to something I can comprehend, but even a thousand digit number is pretty incomprehensible and I'm having trouble switching between "number" and "number of digits". Can anyone Big Numbers for Dummies it for me? Would it literally be a 10 digit number x a 10 digit number 9 times or, essentially "A billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion"? Because I can comprehend those chunks.
And let's say I wanted to address a specific number in there once I broke it down into these "chunks". I could get in the ballpark with 9 groups of 10 digits, but that would be with multiplication. It would be x1*x2*x3*x4*x5*x6*x7*x8*x9. Then I would have to have a 10th number to either add to or subtract from that number to get to the actual number. How big would that number need to be? Because it seems incomprehensible that I could use, say, 100 digits to represent any number from 1 to 1 billion digits. So it's unlikely the final number would be only 10 digits. I would have to use some other "tricks" to zero in on the actual number.
Just so you know, I have no real math education, but I love the hell out of math. Math explains how the universe works. I find math to be mysterious and beautiful and I have a need to understand it. It is pretty much the last remaining "great love of discovery" I have.
So, here are my questions. Are there really about a billion digits worth of bits times 8 on my terabyte hard drive? And how would you represent a number with a billion digits in a term I could comprehend? I'm not even sure how multiplication or division would effect that exactly. I suppose I'm going to have to break it into "chunks" (like 1,000 x 1,000 x 1,000 etc.) to get the base number to something I can comprehend, but even a thousand digit number is pretty incomprehensible and I'm having trouble switching between "number" and "number of digits". Can anyone Big Numbers for Dummies it for me? Would it literally be a 10 digit number x a 10 digit number 9 times or, essentially "A billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion, billion"? Because I can comprehend those chunks.
And let's say I wanted to address a specific number in there once I broke it down into these "chunks". I could get in the ballpark with 9 groups of 10 digits, but that would be with multiplication. It would be x1*x2*x3*x4*x5*x6*x7*x8*x9. Then I would have to have a 10th number to either add to or subtract from that number to get to the actual number. How big would that number need to be? Because it seems incomprehensible that I could use, say, 100 digits to represent any number from 1 to 1 billion digits. So it's unlikely the final number would be only 10 digits. I would have to use some other "tricks" to zero in on the actual number.
Just so you know, I have no real math education, but I love the hell out of math. Math explains how the universe works. I find math to be mysterious and beautiful and I have a need to understand it. It is pretty much the last remaining "great love of discovery" I have.
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