If you are talking about a remainder its like whats left over after a problem for ex.l f divided by 2 equels 2 because 2x2 =4 and we are trying to get to 5 so the awnser is 2 remainder 1 because there is 1 left over so the awnser should like lile 2R1
40
40
5 with a remainder of 15 These problems are trivial to do in your head.
Next to the quotient, write R(x). Let x be the remainder number.
It's called the remainder
When using a calculator to find remainders in division problems, you have to do it differently. When you get the quotient (presumably the number you showed me), subtract the integer part (46 in this case). Multiply that by the divisor, and there's your remainder.
the remainder
12.0123
You do not invert it. However, you can convert the remainder to a decimal by carrying out a long division of the remainder divided by the original divisor. For example, 13/3 = 4r1 Then, long division of the remainder (=1) by the divisor (=3) gives 0.33.... which is the converted remainder. The full quotient, in decimal form is 4.33...
To check for divisibility, use the "%" operator - the remainder of a division. If the remainder is 0, it is divisible.for (i = 1; i
In integer division, you expect the result to be an integer. Anything left over will be quoted as a remainder. The more commonly used division (not integer division) will continue calculating decimals, up to the desired accuracy.
Division BY 76: 75 Division of 76: 76