table of contents
std::div,std::ldiv,std::lldiv,std::imaxdiv(3) | C++ Standard Libary | std::div,std::ldiv,std::lldiv,std::imaxdiv(3) |
NAME¶
std::div,std::ldiv,std::lldiv,std::imaxdiv - std::div,std::ldiv,std::lldiv,std::imaxdiv
Synopsis¶
Defined in header <cstdlib>
std::div_t div( int x, int y ); (1) (constexpr since C++23)
std::ldiv_t div( long x, long y ); (2) (constexpr since C++23)
std::lldiv_t div( long long x, long long y ); (3) (since C++11)
(constexpr since C++23)
std::ldiv_t ldiv( long x, long y ); (4) (constexpr since C++23)
std::lldiv_t lldiv( long long x, long long y ); (5) (since
C++11)
(constexpr since C++23)
Defined in header <cinttypes>
std::imaxdiv_t div( std::intmax_t x, std::intmax_t y ); (6) (since
C++11)
(constexpr since C++23)
std::imaxdiv_t imaxdiv( std::intmax_t x, std::intmax_t y (7) (since
C++11)
); (constexpr since C++23)
Computes both the quotient and the remainder of the division of the numerator
x by
the denominator y.
6,7) Overload of std::div for std::intmax_t is provided in <cinttypes>
(since C++11)
if and only if std::intmax_t is an extended integer type.
The quotient is the algebraic quotient with any fractional part
discarded (truncated towards zero). The remainder is such that quot *
(until C++11)
y + rem == x.
The quotient is the result of the expression x / y. The remainder is
(since C++11)
the result of the expression x % y.
Parameters¶
x, y - integer values
Return value¶
If both the remainder and the quotient can be represented as
objects of the
corresponding type (int, long, long long, std::intmax_t, respectively),
returns both
as an object of type std::div_t, std::ldiv_t, std::lldiv_t, std::imaxdiv_t
defined
as follows:
std::div_t
struct div_t { int quot; int rem; };
or
struct div_t { int rem; int quot; };
std::ldiv_t
struct ldiv_t { long quot; long rem; };
or
struct ldiv_t { long rem; long quot; };
std::lldiv_t
struct lldiv_t { long long quot; long long rem; };
or
struct lldiv_t { long long rem; long long quot; };
std::imaxdiv_t
struct imaxdiv_t { std::intmax_t quot; std::intmax_t rem; };
or
struct imaxdiv_t { std::intmax_t rem; std::intmax_t quot; };
If either the remainder or the quotient cannot be represented, the behavior
is
undefined.
Notes¶
Until CWG issue 614 was resolved (N2757), 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 std::div.
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.
Example¶
// Run this code
#include <cassert>
#include <cmath>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <string>
std::string division_with_remainder_string(int dividend, int divisor)
{
auto dv = std::div(dividend, divisor);
assert(dividend == divisor * dv.quot + dv.rem);
assert(dv.quot == dividend / divisor);
assert(dv.rem == dividend % divisor);
auto sign = [](int n){ return n > 0 ? 1 : n < 0 ? -1 : 0; };
assert((dv.rem == 0) or (sign(dv.rem) == sign(dividend)));
return (std::ostringstream() << std::showpos << dividend <<
" = "
<< divisor << " * (" << dv.quot << ")
"
<< std::showpos << dv.rem).str();
}
std::string itoa(int n, int radix /*[2..16]*/)
{
std::string buf;
std::div_t dv{}; dv.quot = n;
do
{
dv = std::div(dv.quot, radix);
buf += "0123456789abcdef"[std::abs(dv.rem)]; // string literals are
arrays
}
while (dv.quot);
if (n < 0)
buf += '-';
return {buf.rbegin(), buf.rend()};
}
int main()
{
std::cout << division_with_remainder_string(369, 10) << '\n'
<< division_with_remainder_string(369, -10) << '\n'
<< division_with_remainder_string(-369, 10) << '\n'
<< division_with_remainder_string(-369, -10) <<
"\n\n";
std::cout << itoa(12345, 10) << '\n'
<< itoa(-12345, 10) << '\n'
<< itoa(42, 2) << '\n'
<< itoa(65535, 16) << '\n';
}
Output:¶
+369 = +10 * (+36) +9
+369 = -10 * (-36) +9
-369 = +10 * (-36) -9
-369 = -10 * (+36) -9
12345
-12345
101010
ffff
See also¶
fmod
fmodf remainder of the floating point division operation
fmodl (function)
(C++11)
(C++11)
remainder
remainderf
remainderl signed remainder of the division operation
(C++11) (function)
(C++11)
(C++11)
remquo
remquof
remquol signed remainder as well as the three last bits of the division
operation
(C++11) (function)
(C++11)
(C++11)
C documentation for
div
External links¶
1. Euclidean division — From Wikipedia.
2. Modulo (and Truncated division) — From Wikipedia.
2024.06.10 | http://cppreference.com |