It is 0.
2^5 >19 > 2^4 32>19>16 so we use 5 flip flops for modulo 19
The modulo of two numbers is the remainder of dividing one number by the other. For instance, 14 modulo 4 is 2 because 14/4 is 3 remainder 2. Both the numbers and the remainder must be integers otherwise there would be no remainder. If we used floating point numbers, 14/4 would be 3.5 with no remainder. In other words, there's no reason to have a modulo operator for floating point values because the result would always be 0.
7
9 + 4 = 13, not 1.In a ring modulo 12, 9 + 4 = 1. This is the case, for example, in a clock - after the 12th. hour, it goes back to one. (Actually a ring modulo 12 would go from 0 to 11.)9 + 4 = 13, not 1.In a ring modulo 12, 9 + 4 = 1. This is the case, for example, in a clock - after the 12th. hour, it goes back to one. (Actually a ring modulo 12 would go from 0 to 11.)9 + 4 = 13, not 1.In a ring modulo 12, 9 + 4 = 1. This is the case, for example, in a clock - after the 12th. hour, it goes back to one. (Actually a ring modulo 12 would go from 0 to 11.)9 + 4 = 13, not 1.In a ring modulo 12, 9 + 4 = 1. This is the case, for example, in a clock - after the 12th. hour, it goes back to one. (Actually a ring modulo 12 would go from 0 to 11.)
4
make a modulo art
make a modulo art
Yes, if you are counting in modulo 12. For example, in hours on a clock (10:00 am + 4 hours = 2:00 pm) or months of the year (October + 4 months = February).
11 plus 2 is 1 when calculating in modulo 12.
Normally it does not. It only does if you are working with congruence numbers, modulo 12. That is a rather technical way of saying you are using "clock" arithmetic. There are other such examples: modulo 7 for days of the week modulo 2 for ON/OFF are another two that most people are familiar with, even if they don't know that they are using modulo arithmetic!
Oh, dude, modulo arts in math are like when you take a number and divide it by another number, then you look at the remainder. It's like the leftover piece of the division pie. So, if you have 11 divided by 3, you get 3 with a remainder of 2. That remainder, 2, is your modulo art masterpiece!
visual patterns based on the multiplication and addition tables modulo.