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Home/ Questions/Q 715959
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T05:14:44+00:00 2026-05-14T05:14:44+00:00

From Wikipedia: The complexity of the algorithm is O(n(logn)(loglogn)) bit operations. How do you

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From Wikipedia:

The complexity of the algorithm is
O(n(logn)(loglogn)) bit operations.

How do you arrive at that?

That the complexity includes the loglogn term tells me that there is a sqrt(n) somewhere.


Suppose I am running the sieve on the first 100 numbers (n = 100), assuming that marking the numbers as composite takes constant time (array implementation), the number of times we use mark_composite() would be something like

n/2 + n/3 + n/5 + n/7 + ... + n/97        =      O(n^2)                         

And to find the next prime number (for example to jump to 7 after crossing out all the numbers that are multiples of 5), the number of operations would be O(n).

So, the complexity would be O(n^3). Do you agree?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T05:14:44+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 5:14 am
    1. Your n/2 + n/3 + n/5 + … n/97 is not O(n), because the number of terms is not constant. [Edit after your edit: O(n2) is too loose an upper bound.] A loose upper-bound is n(1+1/2+1/3+1/4+1/5+1/6+…1/n) (sum of reciprocals of all numbers up to n), which is O(n log n): see Harmonic number. A more proper upper-bound is n(1/2 + 1/3 + 1/5 + 1/7 + …), that is sum of reciprocals of primes up to n, which is O(n log log n). (See here or here.)

    2. The “find the next prime number” bit is only O(n) overall, amortized — you will move ahead to find the next number only n times in total, not per step. So this whole part of the algorithm takes only O(n).

    So using these two you get an upper bound of O(n log log n) + O(n) = O(n log log n) arithmetic operations. If you count bit operations, since you’re dealing with numbers up to n, they have about log n bits, which is where the factor of log n comes in, giving O(n log n log log n) bit operations.

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