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Long division is the standard algorithm used for pen-and-paper division of multi-digit numbers expressed in decimal notation. It shifts gradually from the left to the right end of the dividend, subtracting the largest possible multiple of the divisor (at the digit level) at each stage; the multiples then become the digits of the quotient, and the final difference is then the remainder.
The number of steps to calculate the GCD of two natural numbers, a and b, may be denoted by T(a, b). [96] If g is the GCD of a and b, then a = mg and b = ng for two coprime numbers m and n. Then T(a, b) = T(m, n) as may be seen by dividing all the steps in the Euclidean algorithm by g. [97]
Many programming languages provide functions that can be used to divide a floating point number by a power of two. For example, the Java programming language provides the method java.lang.Math.scalb for scaling by a power of two, [7] and the C programming language provides the function ldexp for the same purpose. [8]
However, the linear congruence 4x ≡ 6 (mod 10) has two solutions, namely, x = 4 and x = 9. The gcd(4, 10) = 2 and 2 does not divide 5, but does divide 6. Since gcd(3, 10) = 1, the linear congruence 3x ≡ 1 (mod 10) will have solutions, that is, modular multiplicative inverses of 3 modulo 10 will exist. In fact, 7 satisfies this congruence (i ...
In arithmetic, Euclidean division – or division with remainder – is the process of dividing one integer (the dividend) by another (the divisor), in a way that produces an integer quotient and a natural number remainder strictly smaller than the absolute value of the divisor. A fundamental property is that the quotient and the remainder ...
The smallest counterexample is for a power of 15, when the binary method needs six multiplications. Instead, form x 3 in two multiplications, then x 6 by squaring x 3 , then x 12 by squaring x 6 , and finally x 15 by multiplying x 12 and x 3 , thereby achieving the desired result with only five multiplications.
This method is an efficient variant of the 2 k-ary method. For example, to calculate the exponent 398, which has binary expansion (110 001 110) 2, we take a window of length 3 using the 2 k-ary method algorithm and calculate 1, x 3, x 6, x 12, x 24, x 48, x 49, x 98, x 99, x 198, x 199, x 398.
However, the b here need not be the remainder in the division of a by m. Rather, a ≡ b (mod m) asserts that a and b have the same remainder when divided by m. That is, a = p m + r, b = q m + r, where 0 ≤ r < m is the common remainder. We recover the previous relation (a − b = k m) by subtracting these two expressions and setting k = p − q.