(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
bcpowmod — Raise an arbitrary precision number to another, reduced by a specified modulus
bcpowmod( string $num, string $exponent, string $modulus, ?int $scale = null ): string
Use the fast-exponentiation method to raise num to the power exponent with respect to the modulus modulus.
numThe base, as an integral string (i.e. the scale has to be zero).
exponentThe exponent, as an non-negative, integral string (i.e. the scale has to be zero).
modulusThe modulus, as an integral string (i.e. the scale has to be zero).
scalenull, it will default to the default scale set with bcscale(), or fallback to the value of the bcmath.scale INI directive. Returns the result as a string.
This function throws a ValueError in the following cases:
num, exponent or modulus is not a well-formed BCMath numeric stringnum, exponent or modulus has a fractional partexponent is a negative valuescale is outside the valid range This function throws a DivisionByZeroError exception if modulus is 0.
| Version | Description |
|---|---|
| 8.0.0 | scale is now nullable. |
| 8.0.0 | Now throws a ValueError instead of returning false if exponent is a negative value. |
| 8.0.0 | Dividing by 0 now throws a DivisionByZeroError exception instead of returning false. |
The following two statements are functionally identical. The bcpowmod() version however, executes in less time and can accept larger parameters.
<?php $a = bcpowmod($x, $y, $mod); $b = bcmod(bcpow($x, $y), $mod); // $a and $b are equal to each other. ?>
Note:
Because this method uses the modulus operation, numbers which are not positive integers may give unexpected results.
© 1997–2025 The PHP Documentation Group
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License v3.0 or later.
https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.bcpowmod.php