|  | 
|  | 
| back to board | Hint.. Posted by esger  3 Dec 2012 02:58Be sure that(at least for the given interval, [4,2*10^9]) every even number can be shown as sum of two prime numbers.
 1. if n is prime, {n}
 2. if n is even, {n = p1 + p2}
 3. if n is odd   {n = 3 + p1 + p2} ( n-3 is even, so that recall second case.)
 
 For convenience, prime numbers under 10^5 can be initialized.
 
 Edited by author 03.12.2012 03:00
 
 Edited by author 03.12.2012 03:00
Re: Hint.. If he could proof it, he would get 1 thousand million dollar
 Edited by author 02.08.2015 20:59
Re: Hint.. Posted by PO  12 Jan 2019 19:52> if n is odd   {n = 3 + p1 + p2} ( n-3 is even, so that recall second case.)
 IMO this is wrong. 85 = 2 + 83 is the counter-case.
 
 > For convenience, prime numbers under 10^5 can be initialized.
 
 this way too big. :)
 
 Edited by author 12.01.2019 19:53
 
 Edited by author 12.01.2019 19:54
 | 
 | 
|