Defined in header <stdlib.h> | ||
---|---|---|
div_t div( int x, int y ); | (1) | |
ldiv_t ldiv( long x, long y ); | (2) | |
lldiv_t lldiv( long long x, long long y ); | (3) | (since C99) |
Defined in header <inttypes.h> | ||
imaxdiv_t imaxdiv( intmax_t x, intmax_t y ); | (4) | (since C99) |
Computes both the quotient and the remainder of the division of the numerator x
by the denominator y
.
Computes quotient and remainder simultaneously. The quotient is the algebraic quotient with any fractional part discarded (truncated towards zero). The remainder is such that | (until C99) |
Computes the quotient (the result of the expression | (since C99) |
x, y | - | integer values |
If both the remainder and the quotient can be represented as objects of the corresponding type (int
, long
, long long
, imaxdiv_t
, respectively), returns both as an object of type div_t
, ldiv_t
, lldiv_t
, imaxdiv_t
defined as follows:
struct div_t { int quot; int rem; };
or.
struct div_t { int rem; int quot; };
struct ldiv_t { long quot; long rem; };
or.
struct ldiv_t { long rem; long quot; };
struct lldiv_t { long long quot; long long rem; };
or.
struct lldiv_t { long long rem; long long quot; };
struct imaxdiv_t { intmax_t quot; intmax_t rem; };
or.
struct imaxdiv_t { intmax_t rem; intmax_t quot; };
If either the remainder or the quotient cannot be represented, the behavior is undefined.
Until C99, the rounding direction of the quotient and the sign of the remainder in the built-in division and remainder operators was implementation-defined if either of the operands was negative, but it was well-defined in div
and ldiv
.
On many platforms, a single CPU instruction obtains both the quotient and the remainder, and this function may leverage that, although compilers are generally able to merge nearby /
and %
where suitable.
#include <assert.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <math.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <limits.h> void reverse(char* first, char* last) { for (--last; first < last; ++first, --last) { char c = *last; *last = *first; *first = c; } } // demo only: does not check for buffer overflow char* itoa(int n, int base, char* buf) { assert(2 <= base && base <= 16); div_t dv = {.quot = n}; char* p = buf; do { dv = div(dv.quot, base); *p++ = "0123456789abcdef"[abs(dv.rem)]; } while(dv.quot); if(n<0) *p++ = '-'; *p = '\0'; reverse(buf, p); return buf; } int main(void) { char buf[100]; printf("%s\n", itoa(0, 2, buf)); printf("%s\n", itoa(007, 3, buf)); printf("%s\n", itoa(12346, 10, buf)); printf("%s\n", itoa(-12346, 10, buf)); printf("%s\n", itoa(-42, 2, buf)); printf("%s\n", itoa(INT_MAX, 16, buf)); printf("%s\n", itoa(INT_MIN, 16, buf)); }
Possible output:
0 21 12346 -12346 -101010 7fffffff -80000000
(C99)(C99) | computes remainder of the floating-point division operation (function) |
(C99)(C99)(C99) | computes signed remainder of the floating-point division operation (function) |
(C99)(C99)(C99) | computes signed remainder as well as the three last bits of the division operation (function) |
C++ documentation for div |
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