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How would you divide a number by 3 without using *, /, +, -, %, operators?

The number may be signed or unsigned.

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12  
@AlexandreC. - those techniques are using addition (+) though. – hatchet Jul 27 '12 at 19:40
15  
This was oracle so what parts of oracle were you allowed to use? – Hogan Jul 27 '12 at 19:45
7  
The identified duplicate isn't a duplicate. Note that several answers here use neither bit shifting or addition since this question didn't restrict a solution to those operations. – Michael Burr Jul 28 '12 at 0:37
47  
...and here is how PL/SQL is born. – ssg Jul 29 '12 at 13:28
4  
BTW: The other question was about checking if a number is divisible by 3. This question is about dividing by 3. – wildplasser Jul 30 '12 at 13:57
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46 Answers

1 2
up vote 396 down vote accepted

There is a simple function I found here. But it's using the + operator, so you have to add the values with the bit-operators:

// replaces the + operator
int add(int x, int y) {
    int a, b;
    do {
        a = x & y;
        b = x ^ y;
        x = a << 1;
        y = b;
    } while (a);
    return b;
}

int divideby3 (int num) {
    int sum = 0;
    while (num > 3) {
        sum = add(num >> 2, sum);
        num = add(num >> 2, num & 3);
    }
    if (num == 3)
        sum = add(sum, 1);
    return sum; 
}

As Jim commented this works because:

  • n = 4 * a + b
  • n / 3 = a + (a + b) / 3
  • So sum += a, n = a + b, and iterate
  • When a == 0 (n < 4), sum += floor(n / 3); i.e. 1, if n == 3, else 0
share|improve this answer
75  
This is probably the answer Oracle is looking for. It shows you know how the +, -, * and / operators are actually implemented on the CPU: simple bitwise operations. – craig65535 Jul 27 '12 at 21:55
16  
This works because n = 4a + b, n/3 = a + (a+b)/3, so sum += a, n = a + b, and iterate. When a == 0 (n < 4), sum += floor(n/3); i.e., 1 if n == 3, else 0. – Jim Balter Jul 28 '12 at 5:36
4  
Here's a trick i found which got me a similar solution. In decimal: 1 / 3 = 0.333333, the repeating numbers make this easy to calculate using a / 3 = a/10*3 + a/100*3 + a/1000*3 + (..). In binary it's almost the same: 1 / 3 = 0.0101010101 (base 2), which leads to a / 3 = a/4 + a/16 + a/64 + (..). Dividing by 4 is where the bit shift comes from. The last check on num==3 is needed because we've only got integers to work with. – Yorick Sijsling Jul 30 '12 at 12:40
3  
In base 4 it gets even better: a / 3 = a * 0.111111 (base 4) = a * 4^-1 + a * 4^-2 + a * 4^-3 + (..) = a >> 2 + a >> 4 + a >> 6 + (..). The base 4 also explains why only 3 is rounded up at the end, while 1 and 2 can be rounded down. – Yorick Sijsling Jul 30 '12 at 13:04
2  
show 5 more comments

Idiotic conditions call for an idiotic solution:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int main()
{
    FILE * fp=fopen("temp.dat","w+b");
    int number=12346;
    int divisor=3;
    char * buf = calloc(number,1);
    fwrite(buf,number,1,fp);
    rewind(fp);
    int result=fread(buf,divisor,number,fp);
    printf("%d / %d = %d", number, divisor, result);
    free(buf);
    fclose(fp);
    return 0;
}

If also the decimal part is needed, just declare result as double and add to it the result of fmod(number,divisor).

Explanation of how it works

  1. The fwrite writes number bytes (number being 123456 in the example above).
  2. rewind resets the file pointer to the front of the file.
  3. fread reads a maximum of number "records" that are divisor in length from the file, and returns the number of elements it read.

If you write 30 bytes then read back the file in units of 3, you get 10 "units". 30 / 3 = 10

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229  
Fail: you clearly use * in FILE * fp! ;) – x4u Jul 27 '12 at 22:09
7  
@earlNameless: you don't know what they use inside, they are in the black box of "implementation defined". Nothing stops them to just use bitwise operators; anyway, they are outside the domain of my code, so that's not my problem. :) – Matteo Italia Jul 29 '12 at 1:02
24  
Would someone care to explain why or how this answer works in the answer itself? – Ivo Flipse Jul 29 '12 at 8:59
7  
@IvoFlipse from I can clean, you get a big something and shove it into something three times too small, and then see how much fitted in. That about is a third. – Pureferret Jul 29 '12 at 15:00
11  
asked the best C programmer (and most socially awkward) at our company to explain the code. after he did, i said it was pretty ingenious. He said 'this dreck is not a solution' and asked me to leave his desk – cvursache Jul 30 '12 at 12:45
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log(pow(exp(number),0.33333333333333333333)) /* :-) */
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1  
This might actually work if rounded properly and if the number isn't too large. – Mysticial Jul 27 '12 at 19:57
188  
Improved version: log(pow(exp(number),sin(atan2(1,sqrt(8))))) – Alan Curry Jul 28 '12 at 0:14
2  
i just typed it in my js console, it doesn't work with a number higher than 709 (may be its just my system) Math.log(Math.pow(Math.exp(709),0.33333333333333333333)) and Math.log(Math.pow(Math.exp(709),Math.sin(Math.atan2(1,Math.sqrt(8))))) – Shaheer Aug 30 '12 at 13:12
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#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{

    int num = 1234567;
    int den = 3;
    div_t r = div(num,den); // div() is a standard C function.
    printf("%d\n", r.quot);

    return 0;
}
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Using cloud computing :D

Google Search: 30 divided by 3

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111  
Disqualified - you're using +'s in your url. – Anthony Briggs Jul 30 '12 at 11:45
30  
How about www.google.com\webhp?q=30%20divided%20by%203 -- works in Chrome and doesn't use illegal characters. :) – Roy Tinker Jul 30 '12 at 16:33
6  
Technically, if you go to Google by typing 'google.com' and type in '30 divided by 3', then you aren't using + or / ;-) – user577537 Jul 30 '12 at 17:24
23  
@Roy Tinker : Still using % – c.adhityaa Jul 31 '12 at 12:34
7  
This works fine in my browser: google.com?q=30 divided by 3. It's the browser that inserts %, so technically not you using them...? – Svish Aug 1 '12 at 8:17
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Use inline assembler: (also works for negative numbers)

#include <stdio.h>

int main() {
  int dividend = -42, divisor = 3, quotient, remainder;

  __asm__ ( "movl   %2, %%edx;"
            "sarl  $31, %%edx;"
            "movl   %2, %%eax;"
            "movl   %3, %%ebx;"
            "idivl      %%ebx;"
          : "=a" (quotient), "=d" (remainder)
          : "g"  (dividend), "g"  (divisor)
          : "ebx" );

  printf("%i / %i = %i, remainder: %i\n", dividend, divisor, quotient, remainder);
}
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1  
@JeremyP doesn't your comment fail on the assumption that the answer can't be written in C? The question is tagged "C" after all. – Seth Carnegie Aug 1 '12 at 18:33
1  
@JeremyP that is true, but the asm directive is. And I would add that C compilers are not the only ones that have inline assemblers, Delphi has that as well. – Seth Carnegie Aug 2 '12 at 18:01
2  
@SethCarnegie The asm directive is only mentioned in the C99 standard under Appendix J - common extensions. – JeremyP Aug 3 '12 at 9:49
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Use itoa to convert to base 3 string. Drop last trit and convert back to base 10.

// Note: itoa is non-standard but actual implementations
// don't seem to handle negative when base != 10
int div3(int i) {
  char str[42];
  sprintf(str, "%d", INT_MIN); // put minus sign at str[0]
  if (i>0) str[0] = ' ';       // remove sign if positive
  itoa(abs(i), &str[1], 3);    // put ternary absolute value starting at str[1]
  str[strlen(&str[1])] = '\0'; // drop last digit
  return strtol(str, NULL, 3); // read back result
}
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2  
@cshemby I actually didn't know that itoa could use an arbitrary base. If you do a complete working implementation using itoa I'll upvote. – Mysticial Jul 27 '12 at 19:54
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The request says "a number", not "any number", so:

  1. Check if the number is 3.
  2. If so, return 1.
  3. If not, report an invalid input.

Job done, but for extra marks, you could implement a dictionary of commonly requested multiples of three.

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8  
This isn't quite right. The correct program consists of one line, which prints "no input specified". – Thomas Jul 29 '12 at 10:57
2  
Comparison is performed using subtraction at microcode-level (that's why zero flag is set on equality), so you're still subtracting :) – ssg Jul 29 '12 at 22:16
9  
@ssg, The question is not "without subtracting", but without using any of the listed operators. – Paul Butcher Jul 30 '12 at 8:16

(note: see Edit 2 below for a better version!)

This is not as tricky as it sounds, because you said "without using the [..] + [..] operators". See below, if you want to forbid using the + character all together.

unsigned div_by(unsigned const x, unsigned const by) {
  unsigned floor = 0;
  for (unsigned cmp = 0, r = 0; cmp <= x;) {
    for (unsigned i = 0; i < by; i++)
      cmp++; // that's not the + operator!
    floor = r;
    r++; // neither is this.
  }
  return floor;
}

then just say div_by(100,3) to divide 100 by 3.


Edit: You can go on and replace the ++ operator as well:

unsigned inc(unsigned x) {
  for (unsigned mask = 1; mask; mask <<= 1) {
    if (mask & x)
      x &= ~mask;
    else
      return x & mask;
  }
  return 0; // overflow (note that both x and mask are 0 here)
}

Edit 2: Slightly faster version without using any operator that contains the +,-,*,/,% characters.

unsigned add(char const zero[], unsigned const x, unsigned const y) {
  // this exploits that &foo[bar] == foo+bar if foo is of type char*
  return (int)(uintptr_t)(&((&zero[x])[y]));
}

unsigned div_by(unsigned const x, unsigned const by) {
  unsigned floor = 0;
  for (unsigned cmp = 0, r = 0; cmp <= x;) {
    cmp = add(0,cmp,by);
    floor = r;
    r = add(0,r,1);
  }
  return floor;
}

We use the first argument of the add function because we cannot denote the type of pointers without using the * character, except in function parameter lists, where the syntax type[] is identical to type* const.

FWIW, you can easily implement a multiplication function using a similar trick to use the 0x55555556 trick proposed by AndreyT:

int mul(int const x, int const y) {
  return sizeof(struct {
    char const ignore[y];
  }[x]);
}
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4  
@Hogan the question is tagged c. – Matt Ball Jul 27 '12 at 19:47
4  
The question is tagged c, not SQL, even though Oracle is mentioned. – bitmask Jul 27 '12 at 19:48
52  
If you can use ++: Why aren't you simply use /=? – Coodey Jul 27 '12 at 20:10
4  
@bitmask: ++ is also a shortcut: For num = num + 1. – Coodey Jul 27 '12 at 20:17
4  
@bitmask Yeah, but += is finally a shortcut for num = num + 1. – Coodey Jul 27 '12 at 20:23
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It is easily possible on the Setun computer.

To divide an integer by 3, shift right by 1 place.

I'm not sure whether it's strictly possible to implement a conforming C compiler on such a platform though. We might have to stretch the rules a bit, like interpreting "at least 8 bits" as "capable of holding at least integers from -128 to +127".

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Here's my solution:

public static int div_by_3(long a) {
    a <<= 30;
    for(int i = 2; i <= 32 ; i <<= 1) {
        a = add(a, a >> i);
    }
    return (int) (a >> 32);
}

public static long add(long a, long b) {
    long carry = (a & b) << 1;
    long sum = (a ^ b);
    return carry == 0 ? sum : add(carry, sum);
}

First, note that

1/3 = 1/4 + 1/16 + 1/64 + ...

Now, the rest is simple!

a/3 = a * 1/3  
a/3 = a * (1/4 + 1/16 + 1/64 + ...)
a/3 = a/4 + a/16 + 1/64 + ...
a/3 = a >> 2 + a >> 4 + a >> 6 + ...

Now all we have to do is add together these bit shifted values of a! Oops! We can't add though, so instead, we'll have to write an add function using bit-wise operators! If you're familiar with bit-wise operators, my solution should look fairly simple... but just in-case you aren't, I'll walk through an example at the end.

Another thing to note is that first I shift left by 30! This is to make sure that the fractions don't get rounded off.

11 + 6

1011 + 0110  
sum = 1011 ^ 0110 = 1101  
carry = (1011 & 0110) << 1 = 0010 << 1 = 0100  
Now you recurse!

1101 + 0100  
sum = 1101 ^ 0100 = 1001  
carry = (1101 & 0100) << 1 = 0100 << 1 = 1000  
Again!

1001 + 1000  
sum = 1001 ^ 1000 = 0001  
carry = (1001 & 1000) << 1 = 1000 << 1 = 10000  
One last time!

0001 + 10000
sum = 0001 ^ 10000 = 10001 = 17  
carry = (0001 & 10000) << 1 = 0

Done!

It's simply carry addition that you learned as a child!

111
 1011
+0110
-----
10001

This implementation failed because we can not add all terms of the equation:

a / 3 = a/4 + a/4^2 + a/4^3 + ... + a/4^i + ... = f(a, i) + a * 1/3 * 1/4^i
f(a, i) = a/4 + a/4^2 + ... + a/4^i

Suppose the reslut of div_by_3(a) = x, then x <= floor(f(a, i)) < a / 3. When a = 3k, we get wrong answer.

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1  
does it work for input of 3? 1/4, 1/16, ... all return 0 for 3, so would sum to 0, but 3/3 = 1. – hatchet Jul 27 '12 at 21:55
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Since it's from Oracle, how about a lookup table of pre calculated answers. :-D

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To divide a 32-bit number by 3 one can multiply it by 0x55555556 and then take the upper 32 bits of the 64 bit result.

Now all that's left to do is to implement multiplication using bit operations and shifts...

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7  
@luiscubal: No, it won't. This is why I said: "Now all that's left to do is to implement multiplication using bit operations and shifts" – AndreyT Jul 27 '12 at 21:49
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Yet another solution. This should handle all ints (including negative ints) except the min value of an int, which would need to be handled as a hard coded exception. This basically does division by subtraction but only using bit operators (shifts, xor, & and complement). For faster speed, it subtracts 3 * (decreasing powers of 2). In c#, it executes around 444 of these DivideBy3 calls per millisecond (2.2 seconds for 1,000,000 divides), so not horrendously slow, but no where near as fast as a simple x/3. By comparison, Coodey's nice solution is about 5 times faster than this one.

public static int DivideBy3(int a) {
    bool negative = a < 0;
    if (negative) a = Negate(a);
    int result;
    int sub = 3 << 29;
    int threes = 1 << 29;
    result = 0;
    while (threes > 0) {
        if (a >= sub) {
            a = Add(a, Negate(sub));
            result = Add(result, threes);
        }
        sub >>= 1;
        threes >>= 1;
    }
    if (negative) result = Negate(result);
    return result;
}
public static int Negate(int a) {
    return Add(~a, 1);
}
public static int Add(int a, int b) {
    int x = 0;
    x = a ^ b;
    while ((a & b) != 0) {
        b = (a & b) << 1;
        a = x;
        x = a ^ b;
    }
    return x;
}

This is c# because that's what I had handy, but differences from c should be minor.

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This one is the classical division algorithm in base 2:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>

int main()
{
  uint32_t mod3[6] = { 0,1,2,0,1,2 };
  uint32_t x = 1234567; // number to divide, and remainder at the end
  uint32_t y = 0; // result
  int bit = 31; // current bit
  printf("X=%u   X/3=%u\n",x,x/3); // the '/3' is for testing

  while (bit>0)
  {
    printf("BIT=%d  X=%u  Y=%u\n",bit,x,y);
    // decrement bit
    int h = 1; while (1) { bit ^= h; if ( bit&h ) h <<= 1; else break; }
    uint32_t r = x>>bit;  // current remainder in 0..5
    x ^= r<<bit;          // remove R bits from X
    if (r >= 3) y |= 1<<bit; // new output bit
    x |= mod3[r]<<bit;    // new remainder inserted in X
  }
  printf("Y=%u\n",y);
}
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Using counters is a basic solution.

int DivBy3(int num) {
    int result = 0;
    int counter = 0;
    while (1) {
        if (num == counter) return result;  //Modulus 0
        counter = abs(~counter);            //++counter
        if (num == counter) return result;  //Modulus 1
        counter = abs(~counter);            //++counter
        if (num == counter) return result;  //Modulus 2
        counter = abs(~counter);            //++counter
        result = abs(~result);              //++result
    }
}

It is easy to perform also a modulus function, check remarks.

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It's really quite easy.

if (number == 0) return 0;
if (number == 1) return 0;
if (number == 2) return 0;
if (number == 3) return 1;
if (number == 4) return 1;
if (number == 5) return 1;
if (number == 6) return 2;

(I have of course omitted some of the program for the sake of brevity.) If the programmer gets tired of typing this all out, I'm sure that he or she could write a separate program to generate it for him. I happen to be aware of a certain operator, /, that would simplify his job immensely.

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4  
You could use a Dictionary<number, number> instead of repeated if statements so you can have O(1) time complexity! – Peter Olson Aug 18 '12 at 3:28
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Would it be cheating to use the / operator "behind the scenes" by using eval and string concatenation?

For example, in Javacript, you can do

function div3 (n) {
    var div = String.fromCharCode(47);
    return eval([n, div, 3].join(""));
}
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Write the program in Pascal and use the DIV operator.

Since the question is tagged , you can probably write a function in Pascal and call it from your C program; the method for doing so is system-specific.

But here's an example that works on my Ubuntu system with the Free Pascal fp-compiler package installed. (I'm doing this out of sheer misplaced stubbornness; I make no claim that this is useful.)

divide_by_3.pas :

unit Divide_By_3;
interface
    function div_by_3(n: integer): integer; cdecl; export;
implementation
    function div_by_3(n: integer): integer; cdecl;
    begin
        div_by_3 := n div 3;
    end;
end.

main.c :

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

extern int div_by_3(int n);

int main(void) {
    int n;
    fputs("Enter a number: ", stdout);
    fflush(stdout);
    scanf("%d", &n);
    printf("%d / 3 = %d\n", n, div_by_3(n));
    return 0;
}

To build:

fpc divide_by_3.pas && gcc divide_by_3.o main.c -o main

Sample execution:

$ ./main
Enter a number: 100
100 / 3 = 33
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First that I've come up with.

irb(main):101:0> div3 = -> n { s = '%0' + n.to_s + 's'; (s % '').gsub('   ', ' ').size }
=> #<Proc:0x0000000205ae90@(irb):101 (lambda)>
irb(main):102:0> div3[12]
=> 4
irb(main):103:0> div3[666]
=> 222

EDIT: Sorry, I didn't notice the tag C. But you can use the idea about string formatting, I guess...

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Didn't cross-check if this answer is already published. If the program need to be extended to floating numbers, the numbers can be multiplied by 10*number of precision needed and then the following code can be again applied.

#include <stdio.h>

int main()
{
    int aNumber = 500;
    int gResult = 0;

    int aLoop = 0;

    int i = 0;
    for(i = 0; i < aNumber; i++)
    {
        if(aLoop == 3)
        {
           gResult++;
           aLoop = 0;
        }  
        aLoop++;
    }

    printf("Reulst of %d / 3 = %d", aNumber, gResult);

    return 0;
}
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int div3(int x)
{
  int reminder = abs(x);
  int result = 0;
  while(reminder >= 3)
  {
     result++;

     reminder--;
     reminder--;
     reminder--;
  }
  return result;
}
share|improve this answer
1  
++ and -- operaors are diferent from + and - operaors! In assembly language there are two instructions ADD and INC that they have not same opcodes. – Amir Saniyan Aug 5 '12 at 13:50
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This should work for any divisor, not only three. Currently only for unsigned, but extending it to signed should not be that difficult.

#include <stdio.h>

unsigned sub(unsigned two, unsigned one);
unsigned bitdiv(unsigned top, unsigned bot);
unsigned sub(unsigned two, unsigned one)
{
unsigned bor;
bor = one;
do      {
        one = ~two & bor;
        two ^= bor;
        bor = one<<1;
        } while (one);
return two;
}

unsigned bitdiv(unsigned top, unsigned bot)
{
unsigned result, shift;

if (!bot || top < bot) return 0;

for(shift=1;top >= (bot<<=1); shift++) {;}
bot >>= 1;

for (result=0; shift--; bot >>= 1 ) {
        result <<=1;
        if (top >= bot) {
                top = sub(top,bot);
                result |= 1;
                }
        }
return result;
}

int main(void)
{
unsigned arg,val;

for (arg=2; arg < 40; arg++) {
        val = bitdiv(arg,3);
        printf("Arg=%u Val=%u\n", arg, val);
        }
return 0;
}
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Use cblas, included as part of OS X's Accelerate framework.

[02:31:59] [william@relativity ~]$ cat div3.c
#import <stdio.h>
#import <Accelerate/Accelerate.h>

int main() {
    float multiplicand = 123456.0;
    float multiplier = 0.333333;
    printf("%f * %f == ", multiplicand, multiplier);
    cblas_sscal(1, multiplier, &multiplicand, 1);
    printf("%f\n", multiplicand);
}

[02:32:07] [william@relativity ~]$ clang div3.c -framework Accelerate -o div3 && ./div3
123456.000000 * 0.333333 == 41151.957031
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solution using fma() library function, works for any positive number.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>

int main()
{
    int number = 8;//any +ve no.
    int temp = 3, result = 0;
    while(temp <= number){
        temp = fma(temp, 1, 3);//fma(a, b, c) is lib function, returns (a*b)+c 
        result = fma(result, 1, 1);
    } 
    printf("\n\n%d divided by 3 = %d\n", number, result);
}

see my another answer.

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using BCMath in PHP:

<?php
$a = 12345;
$b = bcdiv($a, 3);   
?>

MySQL (it's an interview from Oracle)

> SELECT 12345 DIV 3;

PASCAL:

a:= 12345;
b:= a div 3;

x86-64 ASM:

mov  r8, 3
xor  rdx, rdx   
mov  rax, 12345
idiv r8
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The following script generates a C program that solves the problem without using the operators * / + - %:

#!/usr/bin/env python3

print('''#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h>
const int32_t div_by_3(const int32_t input)
{
''')

for i in range(-2**31, 2**31):
    print('    if(input == %d) return %d;' % (i, i / 3))


print(r'''
    return 42; // impossible
}
int main()
{
    const int32_t number = 8;
    printf("%d / 3 = %d\n", number, div_by_3(number));
}
''')
share|improve this answer

Using Hacker's Delight Magic number calculator

int divideByThree(int num)
{
  return (fma(num, 1431655766, 0) >> 32);
}

Where fma is a standard library function defined in math.h header.

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How about this approach (c#)?

private int dividedBy3(int n) {
        List<Object> a = new Object[n].ToList();
        List<Object> b = new List<object>();
        while (a.Count > 2) {
            a.RemoveRange(0, 3);
            b.Add(new Object());
        }
        return b.Count;
    }
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I think the right answer is:

Why would I not use a basic operator to do a basic operation?

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@Gregoire I agree, There is aboloultley no need to do such an implementation, Bit in comercial life (Orcale) it is neccessary to avoid fulfilling useless requirments: The correct answer is: "This does not make any sense at all, why loose money for that?") – AlexWien Dec 14 '12 at 13:56
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