exercism-solutions/rust/nth-prime
2024-11-06 12:59:36 -06:00
..
.exercism Initial solution to nth prime 2024-11-06 12:39:39 -06:00
src Use much simpler and more readable trial division 2024-11-06 12:59:36 -06:00
tests Initial solution to nth prime 2024-11-06 12:39:39 -06:00
.gitignore Initial solution to nth prime 2024-11-06 12:39:39 -06:00
Cargo.toml Initial solution to nth prime 2024-11-06 12:39:39 -06:00
HELP.md Initial solution to nth prime 2024-11-06 12:39:39 -06:00
README.md Initial solution to nth prime 2024-11-06 12:39:39 -06:00

Nth Prime

Welcome to Nth Prime on Exercism's Rust Track. If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out HELP.md.

Instructions

Given a number n, determine what the nth prime is.

By listing the first six prime numbers: 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, and 13, we can see that the 6th prime is 13.

If your language provides methods in the standard library to deal with prime numbers, pretend they don't exist and implement them yourself.

Remember that while people commonly count with 1-based indexing (i.e. "the 6th prime is 13"), many programming languages, including Rust, use 0-based indexing (i.e. primes[5] == 13). Use 0-based indexing for your implementation.

Source

Created by

  • @sacherjj

Contributed to by

  • @attilahorvath
  • @cbzehner
  • @coriolinus
  • @cwhakes
  • @eddyp
  • @efx
  • @ErikSchierboom
  • @imbolc
  • @lutostag
  • @nfiles
  • @petertseng
  • @rofrol
  • @stringparser
  • @xakon
  • @ZapAnton

Based on

A variation on Problem 7 at Project Euler - https://projecteuler.net/problem=7