BigInteger n = BigInteger.valueOf(5);
BigInteger a = BigInteger.valueOf(3);
System.out.println(a.gcd(n) != BigInteger.ONE);

Why does this evaluate as true even though 5 and 3's gcd is 1?

有帮助吗?

解决方案

You should not use the != operator, but instead use the equals() method

!(a.gcd(n).equals(BigInteger.ONE))

Explanation:

In Java, the == and != operators, when used on objects, compare if the variables are references to the same exact object in memory, not if the objects have the same value. The equals() method checks if they have the same value.

其他提示

Since BigInteger is an object, you should rather use equals. You use == or != to compare reference of the objects.

!(a.gcd(n).equals(BigInteger.ONE));
许可以下: CC-BY-SA归因
不隶属于 StackOverflow
scroll top