% operator (was Re: count of bits set in a long)
David Heisterberg
djh at xipe.osc.edu
Tue Oct 2 02:16:52 AEST 1990
In article <3417 at gmdzi.gmd.de> wittig at gmdzi.gmd.de (Georg Wittig) writes:
>tac at cs.brown.edu (Theodore A. Camus) writes:
>>However, 077 in octal is 63 in decimal, and I believe the following
>>relationship is true : x % 63 = [(x % 64) + (x / 64)] % 63
>
> Does there exist a proof for that equation? Can it be found in
> literature? Is the following true?
> x % n = (x%(n+1) + floor(x/(n+1))) % n (n != 0;n != -1)
> Do there exist similar "surprising" equations?
It should hold for any n,m relatively prime.
x % n = (x % m + x / m) % n <=> x = k * n + (x % m + x / m) <=>
x % m = k * n % m + x % m % m + x / m % m [x % m % m = x % m] <=>
k * n % m + x / m % m = 0 <=> k * n + l * m = -(x / m)
k' * n + l' * m = 1 has solutions in integers if (n,m) = 1, let
k = -(x / m) * k', l = -(x / m) * l'.
Corrections and improvements welcome.
--
David J. Heisterberg djh at osc.edu And you all know
The Ohio Supercomputer Center djh at ohstpy.bitnet security Is mortals'
Columbus, Ohio 43212 ohstpy::djh chiefest enemy.
More information about the Comp.lang.c
mailing list