Math, asked by pooja43739, 1 year ago

an example for trivial factorisation is

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Answered by BrainlyRacer
0

First, define "trivial" to mean any factorization method that requires more than 100 years to factor a very large number (say 10,000,000 digits) using currently available computer capabilities on a single machine. I am using trivial in a mathematical sense to mean "not viable because of time constraints" rather than the semantic meaning of "having no value".

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