As I've written in earlier posts, the site \( \textbf{Numbers Aplenty}\) has been unreliable for quite some time now, often going down for days. For this reason, I developed a SageMath program that produced a similar but even more extensive output. It does the job but my coding skills are somewhat primitive and I made the mistake of getting Gemini to revise my code which it struggled with. It seems that Gemini is more comfortable coding in Python rather than SageMath that is built on top of Python. Sometime the SageMath code malfuntioned. I think it's better to get Gemini to stick with Python when coding.
I asked Gemini the following question:
Numbers Aplenty is a website that I regularly make use of but of late it has become increasingly unreliable because of down time. Is it possible to create a Python program that replicates the output of Numbers Aplenty and also allows me to add additional output of my own. I’m just asking about the feasibility of such a program, you don’t have to create any code. The URL is numbersaplenty.com.
Yes, it is absolutely feasible to create a Python program that replicates the functionality of Numbers Aplenty. In fact, this is an excellent project for Python because the language excels at the exact type of tasks the website performs: handling large integers and running logical checks.
Here is a breakdown of why this is feasible and how you would likely approach it:
1. Python is Built for This
Arbitrary Precision Integers: Unlike many other languages, Python handles massive integers automatically. If you want to check a number with 50 digits (far beyond Numbers Aplenty's 15-digit limit), Python can handle it natively without needing special code.
No Downtime: Since the code runs locally on your machine, you never have to worry about the website being offline.
2. Libraries Do the Heavy Lifting
You would not need to write the complex math from scratch. The Python ecosystem has powerful libraries that already "know" number theory:
SymPy: This is the most critical library for your goal. It is a symbolic mathematics library that includes built-in functions for:
is_prime(n) (Checks if a number is prime)
factorint(n) (Finds prime factorization)
divisors(n) (Lists all divisors)
is_square(n), is_perfect(n), etc.
NumPy: Useful if you decide to generate generating arrays or grids of numbers for comparison.
3. Replicating the "Families" (The "Aplenty" Part)
The website categorizes numbers into families (e.g., "Happy Numbers," "Fibonacci Numbers," "Palindromic Numbers").
Standard Families: Checking if a number is a Fibonacci number or a Palindrome is trivial in Python (often 1–3 lines of code).
Exotic Families: For the more obscure types (like "Vampire numbers" or "Zigzag numbers"), you can look up their definitions (often found on the OEIS - On-Line Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences) and write a small function for each.
4. Customization (Your Requirement)
You mentioned wanting to add your own output. This is the biggest advantage of a custom script. You could design your program to:
Output data in a specific format (JSON, CSV, or a readable text report).
Run specific checks that Numbers Aplenty doesn't have.
Batch process hundreds of numbers at once (which would take forever on a web interface).
Summary of Feasibility
Conceptual Workflow
If you were to commission or build this, the program structure would look like this:
Input: User enters a number (e.g., 1729).
The "Checker" Engine: The number is passed through a list of functions:
check_prime(1729) -> False
check_taxicab(1729) -> True
check_harshad(1729) -> True
...plus your custom checks.
Output: The program prints a report combining the standard results with your custom metrics.
Verdict: Highly feasible. The "hard" part is just the manual labor of coding the definitions for the hundreds of specific number types you might want to track.
Getting Gemini to code in Python from scratch is much preferable to its revising code that I've written. I can gradually build up a list of functions that I want the program to execute in a Jupyter notebook. It will produce output similar but more extensive than Numbers Aplenty, it will not require Internet access, it will be efficiently coded and the code can be easily modified whenever necessary.