As the title says, you can browse prime number tables conviniently with a graphical UI.
Download the program, unzip it anywhere and run it by clicking the program item.
All entries were compared with the extensive prime sieve tables of Tomás Oliveira e Silva and Jan Büthe, where available.
Most entries were double checked, so I'm quite confident that the results are correct.
Table | pi(x) generated with | li(x) generated with |
---|---|---|
1d09 | program LingSieve of myself | boost |
1d10 | previous table | boost |
1d11 | program LingSieve of myself (blue/white) | boost |
1d12 | previous table | boost |
1d13 | previous table | boost |
1d14 | previous table | boost |
1d15 | program primecount of Kim Walisch (green/white) | primecount |
1d16 | previous table | primecount |
1d17 | previous table | primecount |
1d18 | previous table | primecount |
1d19 | program primecount of Kim Walisch (purple/white) | primecount |
1d20 | previous table | primecount |
1d21 | previous table | primecount |
1d22 | previous table | primecount |
1d23 | program primecount of Kim Walisch (pink/white) | primecount |
1d24 | previous table | primecount |
Tables 19 .. 35 were generated with primecount (gold/white)
Tables 36 .. xx were generated with wolframalpha (pink/white)
Basic development is finished, tables hold 33 million records and counting ...
Program with DB can't be uploaded, even in zipped form it exceeds 290MB, whereas GitHub allows 25MB only.
After emptying tables d11 and d12 and truncating all li tables the program size is small enough to be uploaded.