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Computes the remainder of the quotient of two floating-point values, rounded to the nearest integral value.
Syntax
double remainder( double x, double y );
float remainderf( float x, float y );
long double remainderl( long double x, long double y );
#define remainder(X, Y) // Requires C11 or later
float remainder( float x, float y ); /* C++ only */
long double remainder( long double x, long double y ); /* C++ only */
Parameters
x
The numerator.
y
The denominator.
Return value
The floating-point remainder of x / y. If the value of y is 0.0, remainder returns a quiet NaN. For information about the representation of a quiet NaN by the printf family, see printf, _printf_l, wprintf, _wprintf_l.
Remarks
The remainder functions calculate the floating-point remainder r of x / y such that x = n * y + r, where n is the integer nearest in value to x / y and n is even whenever |n - x / y| = 1/2. When r = 0, r has the same sign as x.
Because C++ allows overloading, you can call overloads of remainder that take and return float or long double values. In a C program, unless you're using the <tgmath.h> macro to call this function, remainder always takes two double arguments and returns a double.
If you use the <tgmath.h> remainder() macro, the type of the argument determines which version of the function is selected. See Type-generic math for details.
By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.
Requirements
| Function | Required header (C) | Required header (C++) |
|---|---|---|
remainder, remainderf, remainderl |
<math.h> | <cmath> or <math.h> |
remainder macro |
<tgmath.h> |
For compatibility information, see Compatibility.
Example
// crt_remainder.c
// This program displays a floating-point remainder.
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main( void )
{
double w = -10.0, x = 3.0, z;
z = remainder(w, x);
printf("The remainder of %.2f / %.2f is %f\n", w, x, z);
}
The remainder of -10.00 / 3.00 is -1.000000
See also
Math and floating-point support
ldiv, lldiv
imaxdiv
fmod, fmodf
remquo, remquof, remquol