10

Is there any remainder operator in Python? I do not ask for modulo operator, but remainder. For example:

-5 mod 2 = 1

but

-5 rem 2 = -1 # where "rem" is a remainder operator.

Do I have to implement it by myself ;)?

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  • 3
    Yes, you have to implement it yourself.
    – Katriel
    Aug 28, 2013 at 22:42
  • possible duplicate of Find the division remainder of a number
    – alecxe
    Aug 28, 2013 at 22:42
  • @katrielalex but programming is hard :(
    – blakev
    Aug 28, 2013 at 22:47
  • Do you really just want a truncated-division remainder, without having truncated division as well?
    – abarnert
    Aug 28, 2013 at 22:52
  • 1
    "I do not ask for modulo operator, but remainder." You do understand those are the same things? See Wikipedia: "In computing, the modulo (sometimes called modulus) operation finds the remainder of division of one number by another." (Or do you just want different rules about negatives?)
    – Thanatos
    Aug 28, 2013 at 22:52

3 Answers 3

24

There are actually three different definitions of "modulo" or "remainder", not two:

  • Truncated division remainder: sign is the same as the dividend.
  • Floored division remainder: sign is the same as the divisor.
  • Euclidean division remainder: sign is always positive.

Calling one of them "modulo" and another "remainder" is very confusing; all three of them are useful definitions for both terms.

Almost every language only provides one of the three (Fortran being a notable exception).* Most languages provide the one that matches the language's division operator.** Because Python uses floored division (following Knuth's argument in The Art of Computer Programming), it uses the matching remainder operator.

If you want either of the other, you have to write it manually. It's not very hard; this Wikipedia article shows how to implement all three.

For example:

def trunc_divmod(a, b):
    q = a / b
    q = -int(-q) if q<0 else int(q)
    r = a - b * q
    return q, r

Now, for your example:

>>> q, r = trunc_divmod(-5, 2)
>>> print(q, r)
-2 -1

* Often languages that provide both call truncated remainder some variation on mod, and floored some variation on rem… but that definitely isn't something to rely on. For example, Fortran calls floored remainder modulo, while Scheme calls Euclidean remainder mod.

** Two notable exceptions are C90 and C++03, which leave the choice up to the implementation. While many implementations use truncated division and remainder, some do not (a few even use truncated division and floored remainder, which means a = b * (a/b) + a%b does not even work…).

1

Edit: it's not entirely clear what you meant when you were asking for a remainder operation, the way to do this will depend on what requirements there are on the sign of the output.

If the sign is to be always positive divmod can do what you want, it's in the standard library

http://docs.python.org/2/library/functions.html#divmod

Also you might want to look at the built-in binary arithmetic operators:

http://docs.python.org/2/reference/expressions.html

If the remainder has to have the same sign as the the argument passed then you'd have to roll your own such as this:

import math
def rem(x,y):
    res = x % y
    return math.copysign(res,x)
4
  • 2
    No, divmod(a, b) returns the exact same thing as (a/b, a%b). In other words, the OP will still get 1 rather than -1 as he wants.
    – abarnert
    Aug 28, 2013 at 22:44
  • Clearly "if the sign is to be always positive" doesn't help, because it's not true of the only example the OP gives us, -5 rem 2 = -1.
    – abarnert
    Aug 28, 2013 at 23:04
  • The new version is completely broken—try it with rem(-5, -2).
    – abarnert
    Aug 29, 2013 at 17:50
  • This post needs correction still. "If the sign is to be always positive divmod can do [it]" is incorrect. The sign of the remainder is the same as the sign of the divisor.
    – sfkleach
    Oct 24, 2022 at 11:18
0

Does math.fmod do what you're looking for?

1
  • 1
    No, fmod returns the result "as defined by the platform C library". Which type of remainder that means is implementation-dependent. (C99 does define one, but at least Python 2.7 is written in C90, not C99.) So, this may do what he's looking for on his platform… and then do something different on another platform. (There's also the fact that fmod converts everything to float, and the docs explicitly say that it's not preferred when working with integers.)
    – abarnert
    Aug 29, 2013 at 17:37

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