A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.A modulus is the remainder after a number has been divided into another. 3 divides into 10 with a remainder of 1. So 1 is the modulus of 10 divided by 3.
0.0384
This question has already been answered. Zero divided by zero is zero itself. It is NOT equal to two.
To divide something that has already been divided. 8, which can be divided into two groups of four, can be subdivided into four groups of two.
Prussia was divided into Poland and other German/Russian inhabitants living in that area around the end of WWII times
I think it's fair to say that possibly Allendes Chile excepted it has been the situation that in all countries which have had Communist governments that it has been fine to vote: Just as long as you vote communist. It is not in the nature of human experience to freely elect a Communist government.
There has never been a true Marxist Communist government, mostly because Capitalism has never passed through Marx's end-stage capitalism.However countries claiming to be communist include:North KoreaChinaCuba
from WW1 till 1990 Armenia was one of the soviet union countries but since 1990 it has been a non socialist nor communist country.
Currently there are three countries which could be called 'communist': China, Cuba and North Korea. China is run by a party which calls itself communist. But in recent decades it has re-introduced capitalism and abolished socialism, so it is communist in name only. North Korea is run by a dictator who inherited his position, and by a ruling elite. It is more a one-man dictatorship claiming to be 'communist' than it is a real communist country. That leaves only Cuba. Technically speaking, no countries are or ever have been communist. According to Marxist / communist theory, when a country eventually becomes communist, the government will no longer be necessary and will whither away. They call themselves socialist countries, they are run by communist governments, and they are aiming to become communist.
Haiti is not a communist country and never has been.
An Eastern European communist country
North Korea is currently communist, and has been communist since WWII. It is split from South Korea along the 38th parallel.All of North Korea is Communist. Maybe not the civilians and/or other people living in North Korea, but definitely the government.
The five current communist countries are:China(1949)Cuba(1961)North Korea(1948)Vietnam(1976)Laos(1975)
No, it has always been considered part of the Eastern European Communist countries. Nowadays it it considered one of the eastern European Balkan countries.
Some countries that have historically been governed under communist ideology include China, Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam, and Laos. However, the extent to which these countries adhere to communist ideals varies, and many have also implemented elements of capitalism in their economic systems.
Every part of China was Communist, ever since 1949 until the 1970s, when Chairman Deng Xiaoping instituted capitalism and free trade reforms. Since then, China has no longer been communist in practice, as the nation currently violates many tenets of communism (for example, communist countries by definition have free trade, which China does)
Democratic. However, it has been communist in the past.