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Diophantine Equation

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from __future__ import annotations


def diophantine(a: int, b: int, c: int) -> tuple[float, float]:
    """
    Diophantine Equation : Given integers a,b,c ( at least one of a and b != 0), the
    diophantine equation a*x + b*y = c has a solution (where x and y are integers)
    iff gcd(a,b) divides c.

    GCD ( Greatest Common Divisor ) or HCF ( Highest Common Factor )

    >>> diophantine(10,6,14)
    (-7.0, 14.0)

    >>> diophantine(391,299,-69)
    (9.0, -12.0)

    But above equation has one more solution i.e., x = -4, y = 5.
    That's why we need diophantine all solution function.

    """

    assert (
        c % greatest_common_divisor(a, b) == 0
    )  # greatest_common_divisor(a,b) function implemented below
    (d, x, y) = extended_gcd(a, b)  # extended_gcd(a,b) function implemented below
    r = c / d
    return (r * x, r * y)


def diophantine_all_soln(a: int, b: int, c: int, n: int = 2) -> None:
    """
    Lemma : if n|ab and gcd(a,n) = 1, then n|b.

    Finding All solutions of Diophantine Equations:

    Theorem : Let gcd(a,b) = d, a = d*p, b = d*q. If (x0,y0) is a solution of
    Diophantine Equation a*x + b*y = c.  a*x0 + b*y0 = c, then all the
    solutions have the form a(x0 + t*q) + b(y0 - t*p) = c,
    where t is an arbitrary integer.

    n is the number of solution you want, n = 2 by default

    >>> diophantine_all_soln(10, 6, 14)
    -7.0 14.0
    -4.0 9.0

    >>> diophantine_all_soln(10, 6, 14, 4)
    -7.0 14.0
    -4.0 9.0
    -1.0 4.0
    2.0 -1.0

    >>> diophantine_all_soln(391, 299, -69, n = 4)
    9.0 -12.0
    22.0 -29.0
    35.0 -46.0
    48.0 -63.0

    """
    (x0, y0) = diophantine(a, b, c)  # Initial value
    d = greatest_common_divisor(a, b)
    p = a // d
    q = b // d

    for i in range(n):
        x = x0 + i * q
        y = y0 - i * p
        print(x, y)


def greatest_common_divisor(a: int, b: int) -> int:
    """
    Euclid's Lemma :  d divides a and b, if and only if d divides a-b and b

    Euclid's Algorithm

    >>> greatest_common_divisor(7,5)
    1

    Note : In number theory, two integers a and b are said to be relatively prime,
           mutually prime, or co-prime if the only positive integer (factor) that
           divides both of them is 1  i.e., gcd(a,b) = 1.

    >>> greatest_common_divisor(121, 11)
    11

    """
    if a < b:
        a, b = b, a

    while a % b != 0:
        a, b = b, a % b

    return b


def extended_gcd(a: int, b: int) -> tuple[int, int, int]:
    """
    Extended Euclid's Algorithm : If d divides a and b and d = a*x + b*y for integers
    x and y, then d = gcd(a,b)

    >>> extended_gcd(10, 6)
    (2, -1, 2)

    >>> extended_gcd(7, 5)
    (1, -2, 3)

    """
    assert a >= 0 and b >= 0

    if b == 0:
        d, x, y = a, 1, 0
    else:
        (d, p, q) = extended_gcd(b, a % b)
        x = q
        y = p - q * (a // b)

    assert a % d == 0 and b % d == 0
    assert d == a * x + b * y

    return (d, x, y)


if __name__ == "__main__":
    from doctest import testmod

    testmod(name="diophantine", verbose=True)
    testmod(name="diophantine_all_soln", verbose=True)
    testmod(name="extended_gcd", verbose=True)
    testmod(name="greatest_common_divisor", verbose=True)