/** @version 1.21 2004-08-03 @author Cay Horstmann */ /** This program runs the Sieve of Erathostenes benchmark, using a handwritten BitSet class instead of the library class. It computes all primes up to 2,000,000. */ #include #include using namespace std; template class bitset { public: bitset() : bits(new char[(N - 1) / 8 + 1]) {} bool test(int n) { return (bits[n >> 3] & (1 << (n & 7))) != 0; } void set(int n) { bits[n >> 3] |= 1 << (n & 7); } void reset(int n) { bits[n >> 3] &= ~(1 << (n & 7)); } private: char* bits; }; int main() { const int N = 2000000; clock_t cstart = clock(); bitset b; int count = 0; int i; for (i = 2; i <= N; i++) b.set(i); i = 2; while (i * i <= N) { if (b.test(i)) { count++; int k = 2 * i; while (k <= N) { b.reset(k); k += i; } } i++; } while (i <= N) { if (b.test(i)) count++; i++; } clock_t cend = clock(); double millis = 1000.0 * (cend - cstart) / CLOCKS_PER_SEC; cout << count << " primes\n" << millis << " milliseconds\n"; return 0; }