Divisibility of codes meeting the Griesmer bound (Q1268604)
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scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1212912
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Divisibility of codes meeting the Griesmer bound |
scientific article; zbMATH DE number 1212912 |
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Divisibility of codes meeting the Griesmer bound (English)
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31 May 1999
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The Griesmer bound is a well-known bound on the length of a linear \([n,k,d]\) code, and codes which meet this bound are optimal. A divisor of a linear code is an integer dividing the weights of all its codewords, and a code is called divisible if it has a divisor larger than 1. Optimal codes are often divisible. This paper proves the following result: Theorem 1. Let \(C\) be an \([n,k,d]\) code over \(\text{GF}(p)\), \(p\) a prime, meeting the Griesmer bound. If \(p^e | d\), then \(p^e\) is a divisor of \(C\). Note that for large enough \(d\), codes exist which meet the Griesmer bound. A number of examples of divisible codes are given.
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code divisor
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Griesmer bound
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0.9060787
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0.89502245
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0.8909633
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0.89062953
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