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I need to do a modulus operation on very large integers. The biggest integer supported by my platform (edit: .NET 2.0) is a 64 bit integer, which aren't big enough for the numbers I'm working with.

How can I do a modulus on really big integers, like 12654875632126424875387321657498462167853687516876876?

I have a solution that treats the number as a string and works it in pieces one by one, but I wanted to know if there's a better way.

Here's my function treating the number as a string. It basically does long division the way you'd do it by hand.

    Public Function MyMod(ByVal numberString As String, ByVal modby As Integer) As Integer
        Dim position As Integer = -1
        Dim curSubtraction As Integer = 0

        While position < numberString.Length - 1
            position += 1
            curSubtraction = curSubtraction * 10 + CInt(numberString.Substring(position, 1))

            If (curSubtraction / modby) < 1 And position = numberString.Length - 1 Then
                Return curSubtraction
            ElseIf (curSubtraction / modby) < 1 Then
                Continue While
            Else
                curSubtraction = curSubtraction Mod modby
            End If
        End While
        Return curSubtraction
    End Function

Is there a cleaner, more efficient way?

EDIT: To clarify, the integers are coming from IBAN bank account numbers. According to the specification, you have to convert the IBAN account number (containing letters) into one integer. Then, you do a modulus on the integer. So, I guess you could say that the real source of the integer to perform the modulus on is a string of digits.

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What language is this? You might want to add a tag. – Bill James Nov 10 '08 at 17:19
It would also be helpful to include an example. Do you have the solution to the huge number in your question mod by some other value? – Bill the Lizard Nov 10 '08 at 17:22

4 Answers

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You haven't specified where the numbers are coming from, but you might be able to make some simplifications. If the numbers are originally smaller, then consider things like:

(a + b) MOD n = ((a MOD n) + (b MOD n)) MOD n

or

ab MOD n = (a MOD n)(b MOD n) MOD n
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Yes--I needed to clarify the question better. Your solution would work if I started with multiple integers, but in my case I'm starting with one big integer. – Jim Nov 10 '08 at 17:02
Ahhh... that's a toughie :) – Tony Arkles Nov 10 '08 at 18:36
vote up 3 vote down

Use a crypto/math library. Google for bignum.

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vote up 0 vote down

You can try using some divisibility tests as a preliminary step to speed things up.

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vote up 0 vote down

You need an arbitrary-precision integer math library such as IntX.

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