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Wikipedia

Modulo

In computing, the modulo operation returns the remainder or signed remainder of a division, after one number is divided by another (called the modulus of the operation).

Given two positive numbers a and n, a modulo n (often abbreviated as a mod n) is the remainder of the Euclidean division of a by n, where a is the dividend and n is the divisor.[1]

For example, the expression "5 mod 2" evaluates to 1, because 5 divided by 2 has a quotient of 2 and a remainder of 1, while "9 mod 3" would evaluate to 0, because 9 divided by 3 has a quotient of 3 and a remainder of 0.

Although typically performed with a and n both being integers, many computing systems now allow other types of numeric operands. The range of values for an integer modulo operation of n is 0 to n − 1 (a mod 1 is always 0; a mod 0 is undefined, being a division by zero).

When exactly one of a or n is negative, the basic definition breaks down, and programming languages differ in how these values are defined.

Variants of the definition edit

In mathematics, the result of the modulo operation is an equivalence class, and any member of the class may be chosen as representative; however, the usual representative is the least positive residue, the smallest non-negative integer that belongs to that class (i.e., the remainder of the Euclidean division).[2] However, other conventions are possible. Computers and calculators have various ways of storing and representing numbers; thus their definition of the modulo operation depends on the programming language or the underlying hardware.

In nearly all computing systems, the quotient q and the remainder r of a divided by n satisfy the following conditions:

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

This still leaves a sign ambiguity if the remainder is non-zero: two possible choices for the remainder occur, one negative and the other positive, that choice determines which of the two consecutive quotients must be used to satisfy equations (1). In number theory, the positive remainder is always chosen, but in computing, programming languages choose depending on the language and the signs of a or n.[a] Standard Pascal and ALGOL 68, for example, give a positive remainder (or 0) even for negative divisors, and some programming languages, such as C90, leave it to the implementation when either of n or a is negative (see the table under § In programming languages for details). a modulo 0 is undefined in most systems, although some do define it as a.

  •  
      Quotient (q) and   remainder (r) as functions of dividend (a), using truncated division

    Many implementations use truncated division, for which the quotient is defined by

     

    where   is the integral part function (rounding toward zero), i.e. the truncation to zero significant digits. Thus according to equation (1), the remainder has the same sign as the dividend a so can take 2|n| − 1 values:

     
  •  
    Quotient and remainder using floored division

    Donald Knuth[3] promotes floored division, for which the quotient is defined by

     

    where ⌊⌋ is the floor function (rounding down). Thus according to equation (1), the remainder has the same sign as the divisor n:

     
  •  
    Quotient and remainder using Euclidean division

    Raymond T. Boute[4] promotes Euclidean division, for which the quotient is defined by

     

    where sgn is the sign function, ⌊⌋ is the floor function (rounding down), and ⌈⌉ is the ceiling function (rounding up). Thus according to equation (1), the remainder is non negative:

     
  •  
    Quotient and remainder using rounded division

    Common Lisp and IEEE 754 use rounded division, for which the quotient is defined by

     

    where round is the round function (rounding half to even). Thus according to equation (1), the remainder falls between   and  , and its sign depends on which side of zero it falls to be within these boundaries:

     
  •  
    Quotient and remainder using ceiling division

    Common Lisp also uses ceiling division, for which the quotient is defined by

     

    where ⌈⌉ is the ceiling function (rounding up). Thus according to equation (1), the remainder has the opposite sign of that of the divisor:

     

If both the dividend and divisor are positive, then the truncated, floored, and Euclidean definitions agree. If the dividend is positive and the divisor is negative, then the truncated and Euclidean definitions agree. If the dividend is negative and the divisor is positive, then the floored and Euclidean definitions agree. If both the dividend and divisor are negative, then the truncated and floored definitions agree.

As described by Leijen,

Boute argues that Euclidean division is superior to the other ones in terms of regularity and useful mathematical properties, although floored division, promoted by Knuth, is also a good definition. Despite its widespread use, truncated division is shown to be inferior to the other definitions.

— Daan Leijen, Division and Modulus for Computer Scientists[5]

However, truncated division satisfies the identity  .[6]

Notation edit

Some calculators have a mod() function button, and many programming languages have a similar function, expressed as mod(a, n), for example. Some also support expressions that use "%", "mod", or "Mod" as a modulo or remainder operator, such as a % n or a mod n.

For environments lacking a similar function, any of the three definitions above can be used.

Common pitfalls edit

When the result of a modulo operation has the sign of the dividend (truncated definition), it can lead to surprising mistakes.

For example, to test if an integer is odd, one might be inclined to test if the remainder by 2 is equal to 1:

bool is_odd(int n) {  return n % 2 == 1; } 

But in a language where modulo has the sign of the dividend, that is incorrect, because when n (the dividend) is negative and odd, n mod 2 returns −1, and the function returns false.

One correct alternative is to test that the remainder is not 0 (because remainder 0 is the same regardless of the signs):

bool is_odd(int n) {  return n % 2 != 0; } 

Another alternative is to use the fact that for any odd number, the remainder may be either 1 or −1:

bool is_odd(int n) {  return n % 2 == 1 || n % 2 == -1; } 

A simpler alternative is to treat the result of n % 2 as if it is a boolean value, where any non-zero value is true:

bool is_odd(int n) {  return n % 2; } 

Performance issues edit

Modulo operations might be implemented such that a division with a remainder is calculated each time. For special cases, on some hardware, faster alternatives exist. For example, the modulo of powers of 2 can alternatively be expressed as a bitwise AND operation (assuming x is a positive integer, or using a non-truncating definition):

x % 2n == x & (2n - 1)

Examples:

x % 2 == x & 1
x % 4 == x & 3
x % 8 == x & 7

In devices and software that implement bitwise operations more efficiently than modulo, these alternative forms can result in faster calculations.[7]

Compiler optimizations may recognize expressions of the form expression % constant where constant is a power of two and automatically implement them as expression & (constant-1), allowing the programmer to write clearer code without compromising performance. This simple optimization is not possible for languages in which the result of the modulo operation has the sign of the dividend (including C), unless the dividend is of an unsigned integer type. This is because, if the dividend is negative, the modulo will be negative, whereas expression & (constant-1) will always be positive. For these languages, the equivalence x % 2n == x < 0 ? x | ~(2n - 1) : x & (2n - 1) has to be used instead, expressed using bitwise OR, NOT and AND operations.

Optimizations for general constant-modulus operations also exist by calculating the division first using the constant-divisor optimization.

Properties (identities) edit

Some modulo operations can be factored or expanded similarly to other mathematical operations. This may be useful in cryptography proofs, such as the Diffie–Hellman key exchange. Some of these properties[which?] require that a and n are integers.

  • Identity:
  • Inverse:
  • Distributive:
    • (a + b) mod n = [(a mod n) + (b mod n)] mod n.
    • ab mod n = [(a mod n)(b mod n)] mod n.
  • Division (definition): a/b mod n = [(a mod n)(b−1 mod n)] mod n, when the right hand side is defined (that is when b and n are coprime), and undefined otherwise.
  • Inverse multiplication: [(ab mod n)(b−1 mod n)] mod n = a mod n.

In programming languages edit

Modulo operators in various programming languages
Language Operator Integer Floating-point Definition
ABAP MOD Yes Yes Euclidean
ActionScript % Yes No Truncated
Ada mod Yes No Floored[8]
rem Yes No Truncated[8]
ALGOL 68 ÷×, mod Yes No Euclidean
AMPL mod Yes No Truncated
APL |[b] Yes Yes Floored
AppleScript mod Yes No Truncated
AutoLISP (rem d n) Yes No Truncated
AWK % Yes No Truncated
bash % Yes No Truncated
BASIC Mod Yes No Varies by implementation
bc % Yes No Truncated
C
C++
%, div Yes No Truncated[c]
fmod (C)
std::fmod (C++)
No Yes Truncated[11]
remainder (C)
std::remainder (C++)
No Yes Rounded
C# % Yes Yes Truncated
Math.IEEERemainder No Yes Rounded[12]
Clarion % Yes No Truncated
Clean rem Yes No Truncated
Clojure mod Yes No Floored[13]
rem Yes No Truncated[14]
COBOL FUNCTION MOD Yes No Floored[15]
FUNCTION REM Yes Yes Truncated[15]
CoffeeScript % Yes No Truncated
%% Yes No Floored[16]
ColdFusion %, MOD Yes No Truncated
Common Intermediate Language rem (signed) Yes Yes Truncated[17]
rem.un (unsigned) Yes No
Common Lisp mod Yes Yes Floored
rem Yes Yes Truncated
Crystal %, modulo Yes Yes Floored
remainder Yes Yes Truncated
D % Yes Yes Truncated[18]
Dart % Yes Yes Euclidean[19]
remainder() Yes Yes Truncated[20]
Eiffel \\ Yes No Truncated
Elixir rem/2 Yes No Truncated[21]
Integer.mod/2 Yes No Floored[22]
Elm modBy Yes No Floored[23]
remainderBy Yes No Truncated[24]
Erlang rem Yes No Truncated
math:fmod/2 No Yes Truncated (same as C)[25]
Euphoria mod Yes No Floored
remainder Yes No Truncated
F# % Yes Yes Truncated
Math.IEEERemainder No Yes Rounded[12]
Factor mod Yes No Truncated
FileMaker Mod Yes No Floored
Forth mod Yes No Implementation defined
fm/mod Yes No Floored
sm/rem Yes No Truncated
Fortran mod Yes Yes Truncated
modulo Yes Yes Floored
Frink mod Yes No Floored
Full BASIC MOD Yes Yes Floored[26]
REMAINDER Yes Yes Truncated[27]
GLSL % Yes No Undefined[28]
mod No Yes Floored[29]
GameMaker Studio (GML) mod, % Yes No Truncated
GDScript (Godot) % Yes No Truncated
fmod No Yes Truncated
posmod Yes No Floored
fposmod No Yes Floored
Go % Yes No Truncated[30]
math.Mod No Yes Truncated[31]
big.Int.Mod Yes No Euclidean[32]
Groovy % Yes No Truncated
Haskell mod Yes No Floored[33]
rem Yes No Truncated[33]
Data.Fixed.mod' (GHC) No Yes Floored
Haxe % Yes No Truncated
HLSL % Yes Yes Undefined[34]
J |[b] Yes No Floored
Java % Yes Yes Truncated
Math.floorMod Yes No Floored
JavaScript
TypeScript
% Yes Yes Truncated
Julia mod Yes Yes Floored[35]
%, rem Yes Yes Truncated[36]
Kotlin %, rem Yes Yes Truncated[37]
mod Yes Yes Floored[38]
ksh % Yes No Truncated (same as POSIX sh)
fmod No Yes Truncated
LabVIEW mod Yes Yes Truncated
LibreOffice =MOD() Yes No Floored
Logo MODULO Yes No Floored
REMAINDER Yes No Truncated
Lua 5 % Yes Yes Floored
Lua 4 mod(x,y) Yes Yes Truncated
Liberty BASIC MOD Yes No Truncated
Mathcad mod(x,y) Yes No Floored
Maple e mod m (by default), modp(e, m) Yes No Euclidean
mods(e, m) Yes No Rounded
frem(e, m) Yes Yes Rounded
Mathematica Mod[a, b] Yes No Floored
MATLAB mod Yes No Floored
rem Yes No Truncated
Maxima mod Yes No Floored
remainder Yes No Truncated
Maya Embedded Language % Yes No Truncated
Microsoft Excel =MOD() Yes Yes Floored
Minitab MOD Yes No Floored
Modula-2 MOD Yes No Floored
REM Yes No Truncated
MUMPS # Yes No Floored
Netwide Assembler (NASM, NASMX) %, div (unsigned) Yes No
%% (signed) Yes No Implementation-defined[39]
Nim mod Yes No Truncated
Oberon MOD Yes No Floored-like[d]
Objective-C % Yes No Truncated (same as C99)
Object Pascal, Delphi mod Yes No Truncated
OCaml mod Yes No Truncated[40]
mod_float No Yes Truncated[41]
Occam \ Yes No Truncated
Pascal (ISO-7185 and -10206) mod Yes No Euclidean-like[e]
Perl % Yes No Floored[f]
POSIX::fmod No Yes Truncated
Phix mod Yes No Floored
remainder Yes No Truncated
PHP % Yes No Truncated[43]
fmod No Yes Truncated[44]
PIC BASIC Pro \\ Yes No Truncated
PL/I mod Yes No Floored (ANSI PL/I)
PowerShell % Yes No Truncated
Programming Code (PRC) MATH.OP - 'MOD; (\)' Yes No Undefined
Progress modulo Yes No Truncated
Prolog (ISO 1995) mod Yes No Floored
rem Yes No Truncated
PureBasic %, Mod(x,y) Yes No Truncated
PureScript `mod` Yes No Euclidean[45]
Pure Data % Yes No Truncated (same as C)
mod Yes No Floored
Python % Yes Yes Floored
math.fmod No Yes Truncated
Q# % Yes No Truncated[46]
R %% Yes Yes Floored[47]
Racket modulo Yes No Floored
remainder Yes No Truncated
Raku % No Yes Floored
RealBasic MOD Yes No Truncated
Reason mod Yes No Truncated
Rexx // Yes Yes Truncated
RPG %REM Yes No Truncated
Ruby %, modulo() Yes Yes Floored
remainder() Yes Yes Truncated
Rust % Yes Yes Truncated
rem_euclid() Yes Yes Euclidean[48]
SAS MOD Yes No Truncated
Scala % Yes Yes Truncated
Scheme modulo Yes No Floored
remainder Yes No Truncated
Scheme R6RS mod Yes No Euclidean[49]
mod0 Yes No Rounded[49]
flmod No Yes Euclidean
flmod0 No Yes Rounded
Scratch mod Yes Yes Floored
Seed7 mod Yes Yes Floored
rem Yes Yes Truncated
SenseTalk modulo Yes No Floored
rem Yes No Truncated
sh (POSIX) (includes bash, mksh, &c.) % Yes No Truncated (same as C)[50]
Smalltalk \\ Yes No Floored
rem: Yes No Truncated
Snap! mod Yes No Floored
Spin // Yes No Floored
Solidity % Yes No Floored
SQL (SQL:1999) mod(x,y) Yes No Truncated
SQL (SQL:2011) % Yes No Truncated
Standard ML mod Yes No Floored
Int.rem Yes No Truncated
Real.rem No Yes Truncated
Stata mod(x,y) Yes No Euclidean
Swift % Yes No Truncated[51]
remainder(dividingBy:) No Yes Rounded[52]
truncatingRemainder(dividingBy:) No Yes Truncated[53]
Tcl % Yes No Floored
fmod() No Yes Truncated (as C)
tcsh % Yes No Truncated
Torque % Yes No Truncated
Turing mod Yes No Floored
Verilog (2001) % Yes No Truncated
VHDL mod Yes No Floored
rem Yes No Truncated
VimL % Yes No Truncated
Visual Basic Mod Yes No Truncated
WebAssembly i32.rem_u, i64.rem_u (unsigned) Yes No [54]
i32.rem_s, i64.rem_s (signed) Yes No Truncated[54]
x86 assembly IDIV Yes No Truncated
XBase++ % Yes Yes Truncated
Mod() Yes Yes Floored
Zig %,

@mod, @rem

Yes Yes Truncated[55]
Z3 theorem prover div, mod Yes No Euclidean

In addition, many computer systems provide a divmod functionality, which produces the quotient and the remainder at the same time. Examples include the x86 architecture's IDIV instruction, the C programming language's div() function, and Python's divmod() function.

Generalizations edit

Modulo with offset edit

Sometimes it is useful for the result of a modulo n to lie not between 0 and n − 1, but between some number d and d + n − 1. In that case, d is called an offset and d = 1 is particularly common.

There does not seem to be a standard notation for this operation, so let us tentatively use a modd n. We thus have the following definition:[56] x = a modd n just in case dxd + n − 1 and x mod n = a mod n. Clearly, the usual modulo operation corresponds to zero offset: a mod n = a mod0 n.

The operation of modulo with offset is related to the floor function as follows:

 

To see this, let  . We first show that x mod n = a mod n. It is in general true that (a + bn) mod n = a mod n for all integers b; thus, this is true also in the particular case when  ; but that means that  , which is what we wanted to prove. It remains to be shown that dxd + n − 1. Let k and r be the integers such that ad = kn + r with 0 ≤ rn − 1 (see Euclidean division). Then  , thus  . Now take 0 ≤ rn − 1 and add d to both sides, obtaining dd + rd + n − 1. But we've seen that x = d + r, so we are done.

The modulo with offset a modd n is implemented in Mathematica as Mod[a, n, d] .[56]

Implementing other modulo definitions using truncation edit

Despite the mathematical elegance of Knuth's floored division and Euclidean division, it is generally much more common to find a truncated division-based modulo in programming languages. Leijen provides the following algorithms for calculating the two divisions given a truncated integer division:[5]

/* Euclidean and Floored divmod, in the style of C's ldiv() */ typedef struct {  /* This structure is part of the C stdlib.h, but is reproduced here for clarity */  long int quot;  long int rem; } ldiv_t; /* Euclidean division */ inline ldiv_t ldivE(long numer, long denom) {  /* The C99 and C++11 languages define both of these as truncating. */  long q = numer / denom;  long r = numer % denom;  if (r < 0) {  if (denom > 0) {  q = q - 1;  r = r + denom;  } else {  q = q + 1;  r = r - denom;  }  }  return (ldiv_t){.quot = q, .rem = r}; } /* Floored division */ inline ldiv_t ldivF(long numer, long denom) {  long q = numer / denom;  long r = numer % denom;  if ((r > 0 && denom < 0) || (r < 0 && denom > 0)) {  q = q - 1;  r = r + denom;  }  return (ldiv_t){.quot = q, .rem = r}; } 

For both cases, the remainder can be calculated independently of the quotient, but not vice versa. The operations are combined here to save screen space, as the logical branches are the same.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Mathematically, these two choices are but two of the infinite number of choices available for the inequality satisfied by a remainder.
  2. ^ a b Argument order reverses, i.e., α|ω computes  , the remainder when dividing ω by α.
  3. ^ C99 and C++11 define the behavior of % to be truncated.[9] The standards before then leave the behavior implementation-defined.[10]
  4. ^ Divisor must be positive, otherwise undefined.
  5. ^ As discussed by Boute, ISO Pascal's definitions of div and mod do not obey the Division Identity of D = d · (D / d) + D % d, and are thus fundamentally broken.
  6. ^ Perl usually uses arithmetic modulo operator that is machine-independent. For examples and exceptions, see the Perl documentation on multiplicative operators.[42]

References edit

  1. ^ Weisstein, Eric W. "Congruence". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-08-27.
  2. ^ Caldwell, Chris. "residue". Prime Glossary. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  3. ^ Knuth, Donald. E. (1972). The Art of Computer Programming. Addison-Wesley.
  4. ^ Boute, Raymond T. (April 1992). "The Euclidean definition of the functions div and mod". ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems. ACM Press (New York, NY, USA). 14 (2): 127–144. doi:10.1145/128861.128862. hdl:1854/LU-314490. S2CID 8321674.
  5. ^ a b Leijen, Daan (December 3, 2001). "Division and Modulus for Computer Scientists" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-12-25.
  6. ^ Peterson, Doctor (5 July 2001). . Math Forum - Ask Dr. Math. Archived from the original on 2019-10-22. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  7. ^ Horvath, Adam (July 5, 2012). "Faster division and modulo operation - the power of two".
  8. ^ a b "ISO/IEC 8652:2012 - Information technology — Programming languages — Ada". ISO, IEC. 2012. sec. 4.5.5 Multiplying Operators. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ "C99 specification (ISO/IEC 9899:TC2)" (PDF). 2005-05-06. sec. 6.5.5 Multiplicative operators. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
  10. ^ "ISO/IEC 14882:2003: Programming languages – C++". International Organization for Standardization (ISO), International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). 2003. sec. 5.6.4. the binary % operator yields the remainder from the division of the first expression by the second. .... If both operands are nonnegative then the remainder is nonnegative; if not, the sign of the remainder is implementation-defined {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. ^ "ISO/IEC 9899:1990: Programming languages – C". ISO, IEC. 1990. sec. 7.5.6.4. The fmod function returns the value x - i * y, for some integer i such that, if y is nonzero, the result has the same sign as x and magnitude less than the magnitude of y. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  12. ^ a b dotnet-bot. "Math.IEEERemainder(Double, Double) Method (System)". learn.microsoft.com. Retrieved 2022-10-04.
  13. ^ "clojure.core - Clojure v1.10.3 API documentation". clojure.github.io. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  14. ^ "clojure.core - Clojure v1.10.3 API documentation". clojure.github.io. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  15. ^ a b ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22/WG 4 (January 2023). ISO/IEC 1989:2023 – Programming language COBOL. ISO.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ CoffeeScript operators
  17. ^ ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22 (February 2012). ISO/IEC 23271:2012 — Information technology — Common Language Infrastructure (CLI). ISO. §§ III.3.55–56.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ "Expressions - D Programming Language". dlang.org. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  19. ^ "operator % method - num class - dart:core library - Dart API". api.dart.dev. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  20. ^ "remainder method - num class - dart:core library - Dart API". api.dart.dev. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  21. ^ "Kernel — Elixir v1.11.3". hexdocs.pm. Retrieved 2021-01-28.
  22. ^ "Integer — Elixir v1.11.3". hexdocs.pm. Retrieved 2021-01-28.
  23. ^ "Basics - core 1.0.5". package.elm-lang.org. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  24. ^ "Basics - core 1.0.5". package.elm-lang.org. Retrieved 2022-03-16.
  25. ^ "Erlang -- math". erlang.org. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
  26. ^ ANSI (28 January 1987). Programming Languages — Full BASIC. New York: American National Standards Institute. § 5.4.4. X modulo Y, i.e., X-Y*INT(X/Y).
  27. ^ ANSI (28 January 1987). Programming Languages — Full BASIC. New York: American National Standards Institute. § 5.4.4. The remainder function, i.e., X-Y*IP(X/Y).
  28. ^ "GLSL Language Specification, Version 4.50.7" (PDF). section 5.9 Expressions. If both operands are non-negative, then the remainder is non-negative. Results are undefined if one or both operands are negative.
  29. ^ "GLSL Language Specification, Version 4.50.7" (PDF). section 8.3 Common Functions.
  30. ^ "The Go Programming Language Specification - The Go Programming Language". go.dev. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  31. ^ "math package - math - pkg.go.dev". pkg.go.dev. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  32. ^ "big package - math/big - pkg.go.dev". pkg.go.dev. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  33. ^ a b "6 Predefined Types and Classes". www.haskell.org. Retrieved 2022-05-22.
  34. ^ "Operators". Microsoft. Retrieved 2021-07-19. The % operator is defined only in cases where either both sides are positive or both sides are negative. Unlike C, it also operates on floating-point data types, as well as integers.
  35. ^ "Mathematics · The Julia Language". docs.julialang.org. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  36. ^ "Mathematics · The Julia Language". docs.julialang.org. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  37. ^ "rem - Kotlin Programming Language". Kotlin. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
  38. ^ "mod - Kotlin Programming Language". Kotlin. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
  39. ^ "Chapter 3: The NASM Language". NASM - The Netwide Assembler version 2.15.05.
  40. ^ "OCaml library : Stdlib". ocaml.org. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  41. ^ "OCaml library : Stdlib". ocaml.org. Retrieved 2022-02-19.
  42. ^ Perl documentation
  43. ^ "PHP: Arithmetic Operators - Manual". www.php.net. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  44. ^ "PHP: fmod - Manual". www.php.net. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  45. ^ "EuclideanRing".
  46. ^ QuantumWriter. "Expressions". docs.microsoft.com. Retrieved 2018-07-11.
  47. ^ "R: Arithmetic Operators". search.r-project.org. Retrieved 2022-12-24.
  48. ^ "F32 - Rust".
  49. ^ a b r6rs.org
  50. ^ "Shell Command Language". pubs.opengroup.org. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  51. ^ "Apple Developer Documentation". developer.apple.com. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  52. ^ "Apple Developer Documentation". developer.apple.com. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  53. ^ "Apple Developer Documentation". developer.apple.com. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
  54. ^ a b Rossberg, Andreas, ed. (19 April 2022). "WebAssembly Core Specification: Version 2.0". World Wide Web Consortium. § 4.3.2 Integer Operations.
  55. ^ "Zig Documentation". Zig Programming Language. Retrieved 2022-12-18.
  56. ^ a b "Mod". Wolfram Language & System Documentation Center. Wolfram Research. 2020. Retrieved April 8, 2020.

External links edit

  • Different kinds of integer division
  • Modulorama, animation of a cyclic representation of multiplication tables (explanation in French)

modulo, this, article, about, binary, operation, notation, modular, arithmetic, other, uses, disambiguation, computing, modulo, operation, returns, remainder, signed, remainder, division, after, number, divided, another, called, modulus, operation, given, posi. This article is about the binary operation mod a n For the mod n notation see Modular arithmetic For other uses see Modulo disambiguation In computing the modulo operation returns the remainder or signed remainder of a division after one number is divided by another called the modulus of the operation Given two positive numbers a and n a modulo n often abbreviated as a mod n is the remainder of the Euclidean division of a by n where a is the dividend and n is the divisor 1 For example the expression 5 mod 2 evaluates to 1 because 5 divided by 2 has a quotient of 2 and a remainder of 1 while 9 mod 3 would evaluate to 0 because 9 divided by 3 has a quotient of 3 and a remainder of 0 Although typically performed with a and n both being integers many computing systems now allow other types of numeric operands The range of values for an integer modulo operation of n is 0 to n 1 a mod 1 is always 0 a mod 0 is undefined being a division by zero When exactly one of a or n is negative the basic definition breaks down and programming languages differ in how these values are defined Contents 1 Variants of the definition 2 Notation 3 Common pitfalls 4 Performance issues 5 Properties identities 6 In programming languages 7 Generalizations 7 1 Modulo with offset 7 2 Implementing other modulo definitions using truncation 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksVariants of the definition editIn mathematics the result of the modulo operation is an equivalence class and any member of the class may be chosen as representative however the usual representative is the least positive residue the smallest non negative integer that belongs to that class i e the remainder of the Euclidean division 2 However other conventions are possible Computers and calculators have various ways of storing and representing numbers thus their definition of the modulo operation depends on the programming language or the underlying hardware In nearly all computing systems the quotient q and the remainder r of a divided by n satisfy the following conditions q Z a n q r r lt n displaystyle begin aligned amp q in mathbb Z amp a nq r amp r lt n end aligned nbsp 1 dd This still leaves a sign ambiguity if the remainder is non zero two possible choices for the remainder occur one negative and the other positive that choice determines which of the two consecutive quotients must be used to satisfy equations 1 In number theory the positive remainder is always chosen but in computing programming languages choose depending on the language and the signs of a or n a Standard Pascal and ALGOL 68 for example give a positive remainder or 0 even for negative divisors and some programming languages such as C90 leave it to the implementation when either of n or a is negative see the table under In programming languages for details a modulo 0 is undefined in most systems although some do define it as a nbsp Quotient q and remainder r as functions of dividend a using truncated divisionMany implementations use truncated division for which the quotient is defined by q trunc a n displaystyle q operatorname trunc left frac a n right nbsp where trunc displaystyle operatorname trunc nbsp is the integral part function rounding toward zero i e the truncation to zero significant digits Thus according to equation 1 the remainder has the same sign as the dividend a so can take 2 n 1 values r a n trunc a n displaystyle r a n operatorname trunc left frac a n right nbsp nbsp Quotient and remainder using floored divisionDonald Knuth 3 promotes floored division for which the quotient is defined by q a n displaystyle q left lfloor frac a n right rfloor nbsp where is the floor function rounding down Thus according to equation 1 the remainder has the same sign as the divisor n r a n a n displaystyle r a n left lfloor frac a n right rfloor nbsp nbsp Quotient and remainder using Euclidean divisionRaymond T Boute 4 promotes Euclidean division for which the quotient is defined by q sgn n a n a n if n gt 0 a n if n lt 0 displaystyle q operatorname sgn n left lfloor frac a left n right right rfloor begin cases left lfloor frac a n right rfloor amp text if n gt 0 left lceil frac a n right rceil amp text if n lt 0 end cases nbsp where sgn is the sign function is the floor function rounding down and is the ceiling function rounding up Thus according to equation 1 the remainder is non negative r a n a n displaystyle r a n left lfloor frac a left n right right rfloor nbsp nbsp Quotient and remainder using rounded divisionCommon Lisp and IEEE 754 use rounded division for which the quotient is defined by q round a n displaystyle q operatorname round left frac a n right nbsp where round is the round function rounding half to even Thus according to equation 1 the remainder falls between n 2 displaystyle frac n 2 nbsp and n 2 displaystyle frac n 2 nbsp and its sign depends on which side of zero it falls to be within these boundaries r a n round a n displaystyle r a n operatorname round left frac a n right nbsp nbsp Quotient and remainder using ceiling divisionCommon Lisp also uses ceiling division for which the quotient is defined by q a n displaystyle q left lceil frac a n right rceil nbsp where is the ceiling function rounding up Thus according to equation 1 the remainder has the opposite sign of that of the divisor r a n a n displaystyle r a n left lceil frac a n right rceil nbsp If both the dividend and divisor are positive then the truncated floored and Euclidean definitions agree If the dividend is positive and the divisor is negative then the truncated and Euclidean definitions agree If the dividend is negative and the divisor is positive then the floored and Euclidean definitions agree If both the dividend and divisor are negative then the truncated and floored definitions agree As described by Leijen Boute argues that Euclidean division is superior to the other ones in terms of regularity and useful mathematical properties although floored division promoted by Knuth is also a good definition Despite its widespread use truncated division is shown to be inferior to the other definitions Daan Leijen Division and Modulus for Computer Scientists 5 However truncated division satisfies the identity a b a b a b displaystyle a b a b a b nbsp 6 Notation editThis section is about the binary mod operation For the mod m notation see congruence relation Some calculators have a mod function button and many programming languages have a similar function expressed as mod a n for example Some also support expressions that use mod or Mod as a modulo or remainder operator such as a n or a mod n For environments lacking a similar function any of the three definitions above can be used Common pitfalls editWhen the result of a modulo operation has the sign of the dividend truncated definition it can lead to surprising mistakes For example to test if an integer is odd one might be inclined to test if the remainder by 2 is equal to 1 bool is odd int n return n 2 1 But in a language where modulo has the sign of the dividend that is incorrect because when n the dividend is negative and odd n mod 2 returns 1 and the function returns false One correct alternative is to test that the remainder is not 0 because remainder 0 is the same regardless of the signs bool is odd int n return n 2 0 Another alternative is to use the fact that for any odd number the remainder may be either 1 or 1 bool is odd int n return n 2 1 n 2 1 A simpler alternative is to treat the result of n 2 as if it is a boolean value where any non zero value is true bool is odd int n return n 2 Performance issues editModulo operations might be implemented such that a division with a remainder is calculated each time For special cases on some hardware faster alternatives exist For example the modulo of powers of 2 can alternatively be expressed as a bitwise AND operation assuming x is a positive integer or using a non truncating definition x 2 sup n sup x amp 2 sup n sup 1 Examples x 2 x amp 1 x 4 x amp 3 x 8 x amp 7In devices and software that implement bitwise operations more efficiently than modulo these alternative forms can result in faster calculations 7 Compiler optimizations may recognize expressions of the form expression constant where constant is a power of two and automatically implement them as expression amp constant 1 allowing the programmer to write clearer code without compromising performance This simple optimization is not possible for languages in which the result of the modulo operation has the sign of the dividend including C unless the dividend is of an unsigned integer type This is because if the dividend is negative the modulo will be negative whereas expression amp constant 1 will always be positive For these languages the equivalence x 2 sup n sup x lt 0 x 2 sup n sup 1 x amp 2 sup n sup 1 has to be used instead expressed using bitwise OR NOT and AND operations Optimizations for general constant modulus operations also exist by calculating the division first using the constant divisor optimization Properties identities editSee also Modular arithmetic Properties Some modulo operations can be factored or expanded similarly to other mathematical operations This may be useful in cryptography proofs such as the Diffie Hellman key exchange Some of these properties which require that a and n are integers Identity a mod n mod n a mod n nx mod n 0 for all positive integer values of x If p is a prime number which is not a divisor of b then abp 1 mod p a mod p due to Fermat s little theorem Inverse a mod n a mod n mod n 0 b 1 mod n denotes the modular multiplicative inverse which is defined if and only if b and n are relatively prime which is the case when the left hand side is defined b 1 mod n b mod n mod n 1 Distributive a b mod n a mod n b mod n mod n ab mod n a mod n b mod n mod n Division definition a b mod n a mod n b 1 mod n mod n when the right hand side is defined that is when b and n are coprime and undefined otherwise Inverse multiplication ab mod n b 1 mod n mod n a mod n In programming languages editModulo operators in various programming languages Language Operator Integer Floating point DefinitionABAP MOD Yes Yes EuclideanActionScript Yes No TruncatedAda mod Yes No Floored 8 rem Yes No Truncated 8 ALGOL 68 mod Yes No EuclideanAMPL mod Yes No TruncatedAPL b Yes Yes FlooredAppleScript mod Yes No TruncatedAutoLISP rem d n Yes No TruncatedAWK Yes No Truncatedbash Yes No TruncatedBASIC Mod Yes No Varies by implementationbc Yes No TruncatedCC div Yes No Truncated c fmod C std fmod C No Yes Truncated 11 remainder C std remainder C No Yes RoundedC Yes Yes TruncatedMath IEEERemainder No Yes Rounded 12 Clarion Yes No TruncatedClean rem Yes No TruncatedClojure mod Yes No Floored 13 rem Yes No Truncated 14 COBOL FUNCTION MOD Yes No Floored 15 FUNCTION REM Yes Yes Truncated 15 CoffeeScript Yes No Truncated Yes No Floored 16 ColdFusion MOD Yes No TruncatedCommon Intermediate Language rem signed Yes Yes Truncated 17 rem un unsigned Yes No Common Lisp mod Yes Yes Flooredrem Yes Yes TruncatedCrystal modulo Yes Yes Flooredremainder Yes Yes TruncatedD Yes Yes Truncated 18 Dart Yes Yes Euclidean 19 remainder Yes Yes Truncated 20 Eiffel Yes No TruncatedElixir rem 2 Yes No Truncated 21 Integer mod 2 Yes No Floored 22 Elm modBy Yes No Floored 23 remainderBy Yes No Truncated 24 Erlang rem Yes No Truncatedmath fmod 2 No Yes Truncated same as C 25 Euphoria mod Yes No Flooredremainder Yes No TruncatedF Yes Yes TruncatedMath IEEERemainder No Yes Rounded 12 Factor mod Yes No TruncatedFileMaker Mod Yes No FlooredForth mod Yes No Implementation definedfm mod Yes No Flooredsm rem Yes No TruncatedFortran mod Yes Yes Truncatedmodulo Yes Yes FlooredFrink mod Yes No FlooredFull BASIC MOD Yes Yes Floored 26 REMAINDER Yes Yes Truncated 27 GLSL Yes No Undefined 28 mod No Yes Floored 29 GameMaker Studio GML mod Yes No TruncatedGDScript Godot Yes No Truncatedfmod No Yes Truncatedposmod Yes No Flooredfposmod No Yes FlooredGo Yes No Truncated 30 math Mod No Yes Truncated 31 big Int Mod Yes No Euclidean 32 Groovy Yes No TruncatedHaskell mod Yes No Floored 33 rem Yes No Truncated 33 Data Fixed mod GHC No Yes FlooredHaxe Yes No TruncatedHLSL Yes Yes Undefined 34 J b Yes No FlooredJava Yes Yes TruncatedMath floorMod Yes No FlooredJavaScriptTypeScript Yes Yes TruncatedJulia mod Yes Yes Floored 35 rem Yes Yes Truncated 36 Kotlin rem Yes Yes Truncated 37 mod Yes Yes Floored 38 ksh Yes No Truncated same as POSIX sh fmod No Yes TruncatedLabVIEW mod Yes Yes TruncatedLibreOffice MOD Yes No FlooredLogo MODULO Yes No FlooredREMAINDER Yes No TruncatedLua 5 Yes Yes FlooredLua 4 mod x y Yes Yes TruncatedLiberty BASIC MOD Yes No TruncatedMathcad mod x y Yes No FlooredMaple e mod m by default modp e m Yes No Euclideanmods e m Yes No Roundedfrem e m Yes Yes RoundedMathematica Mod a b Yes No FlooredMATLAB mod Yes No Flooredrem Yes No TruncatedMaxima mod Yes No Flooredremainder Yes No TruncatedMaya Embedded Language Yes No TruncatedMicrosoft Excel MOD Yes Yes FlooredMinitab MOD Yes No FlooredModula 2 MOD Yes No FlooredREM Yes No TruncatedMUMPS Yes No FlooredNetwide Assembler NASM NASMX div unsigned Yes No signed Yes No Implementation defined 39 Nim mod Yes No TruncatedOberon MOD Yes No Floored like d Objective C Yes No Truncated same as C99 Object Pascal Delphi mod Yes No TruncatedOCaml mod Yes No Truncated 40 mod float No Yes Truncated 41 Occam Yes No TruncatedPascal ISO 7185 and 10206 mod Yes No Euclidean like e Perl Yes No Floored f POSIX fmod No Yes TruncatedPhix mod Yes No Flooredremainder Yes No TruncatedPHP Yes No Truncated 43 fmod No Yes Truncated 44 PIC BASIC Pro Yes No TruncatedPL I mod Yes No Floored ANSI PL I PowerShell Yes No TruncatedProgramming Code PRC MATH OP MOD Yes No UndefinedProgress modulo Yes No TruncatedProlog ISO 1995 mod Yes No Flooredrem Yes No TruncatedPureBasic Mod x y Yes No TruncatedPureScript mod Yes No Euclidean 45 Pure Data Yes No Truncated same as C mod Yes No FlooredPython Yes Yes Flooredmath fmod No Yes TruncatedQ Yes No Truncated 46 R Yes Yes Floored 47 Racket modulo Yes No Flooredremainder Yes No TruncatedRaku No Yes FlooredRealBasic MOD Yes No TruncatedReason mod Yes No TruncatedRexx Yes Yes TruncatedRPG REM Yes No TruncatedRuby modulo Yes Yes Flooredremainder Yes Yes TruncatedRust Yes Yes Truncatedrem euclid Yes Yes Euclidean 48 SAS MOD Yes No TruncatedScala Yes Yes TruncatedScheme modulo Yes No Flooredremainder Yes No TruncatedScheme R6RS mod Yes No Euclidean 49 mod0 Yes No Rounded 49 flmod No Yes Euclideanflmod0 No Yes RoundedScratch mod Yes Yes FlooredSeed7 mod Yes Yes Flooredrem Yes Yes TruncatedSenseTalk modulo Yes No Flooredrem Yes No Truncatedsh POSIX includes bash mksh amp c Yes No Truncated same as C 50 Smalltalk Yes No Flooredrem Yes No TruncatedSnap mod Yes No FlooredSpin Yes No FlooredSolidity Yes No FlooredSQL SQL 1999 mod x y Yes No TruncatedSQL SQL 2011 Yes No TruncatedStandard ML mod Yes No FlooredInt rem Yes No TruncatedReal rem No Yes TruncatedStata mod x y Yes No EuclideanSwift Yes No Truncated 51 remainder dividingBy No Yes Rounded 52 truncatingRemainder dividingBy No Yes Truncated 53 Tcl Yes No Flooredfmod No Yes Truncated as C tcsh Yes No TruncatedTorque Yes No TruncatedTuring mod Yes No FlooredVerilog 2001 Yes No TruncatedVHDL mod Yes No Flooredrem Yes No TruncatedVimL Yes No TruncatedVisual Basic Mod Yes No TruncatedWebAssembly i32 rem u i64 rem u unsigned Yes No 54 i32 rem s i64 rem s signed Yes No Truncated 54 x86 assembly IDIV Yes No TruncatedXBase Yes Yes TruncatedMod Yes Yes FlooredZig mod rem Yes Yes Truncated 55 Z3 theorem prover div mod Yes No EuclideanIn addition many computer systems provide a divmod functionality which produces the quotient and the remainder at the same time Examples include the x86 architecture s IDIV instruction the C programming language s div function and Python s divmod function Generalizations editModulo with offset edit Sometimes it is useful for the result of a modulo n to lie not between 0 and n 1 but between some number d and d n 1 In that case d is called an offset and d 1 is particularly common There does not seem to be a standard notation for this operation so let us tentatively use a modd n We thus have the following definition 56 x a modd n just in case d x d n 1 and x mod n a mod n Clearly the usual modulo operation corresponds to zero offset a mod n a mod0 n The operation of modulo with offset is related to the floor function as follows a mod d n a n a d n displaystyle a operatorname mod d n a n left lfloor frac a d n right rfloor nbsp dd To see this let x a n a d n textstyle x a n left lfloor frac a d n right rfloor nbsp We first show that x mod n a mod n It is in general true that a bn mod n a mod n for all integers b thus this is true also in the particular case when b a d n textstyle b left lfloor frac a d n right rfloor nbsp but that means that x mod n a n a d n mod n a mod n textstyle x bmod n left a n left lfloor frac a d n right rfloor right bmod n a bmod n nbsp which is what we wanted to prove It remains to be shown that d x d n 1 Let k and r be the integers such that a d kn r with 0 r n 1 see Euclidean division Then a d n k textstyle left lfloor frac a d n right rfloor k nbsp thus x a n a d n a n k d r textstyle x a n left lfloor frac a d n right rfloor a nk d r nbsp Now take 0 r n 1 and add d to both sides obtaining d d r d n 1 But we ve seen that x d r so we are done The modulo with offset a modd n is implemented in Mathematica as Mod a n d 56 Implementing other modulo definitions using truncation edit Despite the mathematical elegance of Knuth s floored division and Euclidean division it is generally much more common to find a truncated division based modulo in programming languages Leijen provides the following algorithms for calculating the two divisions given a truncated integer division 5 Euclidean and Floored divmod in the style of C s ldiv typedef struct This structure is part of the C stdlib h but is reproduced here for clarity long int quot long int rem ldiv t Euclidean division inline ldiv t ldivE long numer long denom The C99 and C 11 languages define both of these as truncating long q numer denom long r numer denom if r lt 0 if denom gt 0 q q 1 r r denom else q q 1 r r denom return ldiv t quot q rem r Floored division inline ldiv t ldivF long numer long denom long q numer denom long r numer denom if r gt 0 amp amp denom lt 0 r lt 0 amp amp denom gt 0 q q 1 r r denom return ldiv t quot q rem r For both cases the remainder can be calculated independently of the quotient but not vice versa The operations are combined here to save screen space as the logical branches are the same See also editModulo disambiguation many uses of the word modulo all of which grew out of Carl F Gauss s introduction of modular arithmetic in 1801 Modulo mathematics general use of the term in mathematics Modular exponentiation Turn angle Notes edit Mathematically these two choices are but two of the infinite number of choices available for the inequality satisfied by a remainder a b Argument order reverses i e a w computes w mod a displaystyle omega bmod alpha nbsp the remainder when dividing w by a C99 and C 11 define the behavior of to be truncated 9 The standards before then leave the behavior implementation defined 10 Divisor must be positive otherwise undefined As discussed by Boute ISO Pascal s definitions of div and mod do not obey the Division Identity of D d D d D d and are thus fundamentally broken Perl usually uses arithmetic modulo operator that is machine independent For examples and exceptions see the Perl documentation on multiplicative operators 42 References edit Weisstein Eric W Congruence mathworld wolfram com Retrieved 2020 08 27 Caldwell Chris residue Prime Glossary Retrieved August 27 2020 Knuth Donald E 1972 The Art of Computer Programming Addison Wesley Boute Raymond T April 1992 The Euclidean definition of the functions div and mod ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems ACM Press New York NY USA 14 2 127 144 doi 10 1145 128861 128862 hdl 1854 LU 314490 S2CID 8321674 a b Leijen Daan December 3 2001 Division and Modulus for Computer Scientists PDF Retrieved 2014 12 25 Peterson Doctor 5 July 2001 Mod Function and Negative Numbers Math Forum Ask Dr Math Archived from the original on 2019 10 22 Retrieved 22 October 2019 Horvath Adam July 5 2012 Faster division and modulo operation the power of two a b ISO IEC 8652 2012 Information technology Programming languages Ada ISO IEC 2012 sec 4 5 5 Multiplying Operators a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help C99 specification ISO IEC 9899 TC2 PDF 2005 05 06 sec 6 5 5 Multiplicative operators Retrieved 16 August 2018 ISO IEC 14882 2003 Programming languages C International Organization for Standardization ISO International Electrotechnical Commission IEC 2003 sec 5 6 4 the binary operator yields the remainder from the division of the first expression by the second If both operands are nonnegative then the remainder is nonnegative if not the sign of the remainder is implementation defined a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help ISO IEC 9899 1990 Programming languages C ISO IEC 1990 sec 7 5 6 4 The fmod function returns the value x i y for some integer i such that if y is nonzero the result has the same sign as x and magnitude less than the magnitude of y a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b dotnet bot Math IEEERemainder Double Double Method System learn microsoft com Retrieved 2022 10 04 clojure core Clojure v1 10 3 API documentation clojure github io Retrieved 2022 03 16 clojure core Clojure v1 10 3 API documentation clojure github io Retrieved 2022 03 16 a b ISO IEC JTC 1 SC 22 WG 4 January 2023 ISO IEC 1989 2023 Programming language COBOL ISO a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link CoffeeScript operators ISO IEC JTC 1 SC 22 February 2012 ISO IEC 23271 2012 Information technology Common Language Infrastructure CLI ISO III 3 55 56 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Expressions D Programming Language dlang org Retrieved 2021 06 01 operator method num class dart core library Dart API api dart dev Retrieved 2021 06 01 remainder method num class dart core library Dart API api dart dev Retrieved 2021 06 01 Kernel Elixir v1 11 3 hexdocs pm Retrieved 2021 01 28 Integer Elixir v1 11 3 hexdocs pm Retrieved 2021 01 28 Basics core 1 0 5 package elm lang org Retrieved 2022 03 16 Basics core 1 0 5 package elm lang org Retrieved 2022 03 16 Erlang math erlang org Retrieved 2021 06 01 ANSI 28 January 1987 Programming Languages Full BASIC New York American National Standards Institute 5 4 4 X modulo Y i e X Y INT X Y ANSI 28 January 1987 Programming Languages Full BASIC New York American National Standards Institute 5 4 4 The remainder function i e X Y IP X Y GLSL Language Specification Version 4 50 7 PDF section 5 9 Expressions If both operands are non negative then the remainder is non negative Results are undefined if one or both operands are negative GLSL Language Specification Version 4 50 7 PDF section 8 3 Common Functions The Go Programming Language Specification The Go Programming Language go dev Retrieved 2022 02 28 math package math pkg go dev pkg go dev Retrieved 2022 02 28 big package math big pkg go dev pkg go dev Retrieved 2022 02 28 a b 6 Predefined Types and Classes www haskell org Retrieved 2022 05 22 Operators Microsoft Retrieved 2021 07 19 The operator is defined only in cases where either both sides are positive or both sides are negative Unlike C it also operates on floating point data types as well as integers Mathematics The Julia Language docs julialang org Retrieved 2021 11 20 Mathematics The Julia Language docs julialang org Retrieved 2021 11 20 rem Kotlin Programming Language Kotlin Retrieved 2021 05 05 mod Kotlin Programming Language Kotlin Retrieved 2021 05 05 Chapter 3 The NASM Language NASM The Netwide Assembler version 2 15 05 OCaml library Stdlib ocaml org Retrieved 2022 02 19 OCaml library Stdlib ocaml org Retrieved 2022 02 19 Perl documentation PHP Arithmetic Operators Manual www php net Retrieved 2021 11 20 PHP fmod Manual www php net Retrieved 2021 11 20 EuclideanRing QuantumWriter Expressions docs microsoft com Retrieved 2018 07 11 R Arithmetic Operators search r project org Retrieved 2022 12 24 F32 Rust a b r6rs org Shell Command Language pubs opengroup org Retrieved 2021 02 05 Apple Developer Documentation developer apple com Retrieved 2021 11 20 Apple Developer Documentation developer apple com Retrieved 2021 11 20 Apple Developer Documentation developer apple com Retrieved 2021 11 20 a b Rossberg Andreas ed 19 April 2022 WebAssembly Core Specification Version 2 0 World Wide Web Consortium 4 3 2 Integer Operations Zig Documentation Zig Programming Language Retrieved 2022 12 18 a b Mod Wolfram Language amp System Documentation Center Wolfram Research 2020 Retrieved April 8 2020 External links editDifferent kinds of integer division Modulorama animation of a cyclic representation of multiplication tables explanation in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Modulo amp oldid 1206329794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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