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Home/ Questions/Q 6891335
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 27, 20262026-05-27T06:23:49+00:00 2026-05-27T06:23:49+00:00

I am curious about these languages (Java, C …) which ignore mathematical definition of

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I am curious about these languages (Java, C …) which ignore mathematical definition of modulus operation.

What is the point of returning negative values in a module operation (that, by definition, should allways return a positive number)?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-27T06:23:50+00:00Added an answer on May 27, 2026 at 6:23 am

    I doubt that the remainder operator was deliberately designed to have those semantics, which I agree aren’t very useful. (Would you ever write a calendar program that shows the weekdays Sunday, Anti-Saturday, Anti-Friday, …, Anti-Monday for dates before the epoch?)

    Rather, negative remainders are a side effect of the way integer division is defined.

    A rem B := A - (A div B) * B
    

    If A div B is defined as trunc(A/B), you get C’s % operator. If A div B is defined as floor(A/B), you get Python’s % operator. Other definitions are possible.

    So, the real question is:

    Why do C++, Java, C#, etc. use truncating integer division?

    Because that’s the way that C does it.

    Why does C use truncating division?

    Originally, C didn’t specify how / should handle negative numbers. It left it up to the hardware.

    In practice, every significant C implementation used truncating division, so in 1999 these semantics were formally made a part of the C standard.

    Why does hardware use truncating division?

    Because it’s easier (=cheaper) to implement in terms of unsigned division. You just calculate abs(A) div abs(B) and flip the sign if (A < 0) xor (B < 0).

    Floored division has the additional step of subtracting 1 from the quotient if the remainder is nonzero.

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