Skip to content
Snippets Groups Projects
ldiv.c 1.39 KiB
Newer Older
  • Learn to ignore specific revisions
  • Wolfgang Denk's avatar
    Wolfgang Denk committed
    /* Copyright (C) 1992, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
       This file is part of the GNU C Library.
    
    
     * SPDX-License-Identifier:	LGPL-2.0+
     */
    
    Wolfgang Denk's avatar
    Wolfgang Denk committed
    
    typedef struct {
    
    Wolfgang Denk's avatar
    Wolfgang Denk committed
    	long    quot;
    	long    rem;
    
    Wolfgang Denk's avatar
    Wolfgang Denk committed
    } ldiv_t;
    /* Return the `ldiv_t' representation of NUMER over DENOM.  */
    ldiv_t
    ldiv (long int numer, long int denom)
    {
      ldiv_t result;
    
      result.quot = numer / denom;
      result.rem = numer % denom;
    
      /* The ANSI standard says that |QUOT| <= |NUMER / DENOM|, where
         NUMER / DENOM is to be computed in infinite precision.  In
         other words, we should always truncate the quotient towards
         zero, never -infinity.  Machine division and remainer may
         work either way when one or both of NUMER or DENOM is
         negative.  If only one is negative and QUOT has been
         truncated towards -infinity, REM will have the same sign as
         DENOM and the opposite sign of NUMER; if both are negative
         and QUOT has been truncated towards -infinity, REM will be
         positive (will have the opposite sign of NUMER).  These are
         considered `wrong'.  If both are NUM and DENOM are positive,
         RESULT will always be positive.  This all boils down to: if
         NUMER >= 0, but REM < 0, we got the wrong answer.  In that
         case, to get the right answer, add 1 to QUOT and subtract
         DENOM from REM.  */
    
      if (numer >= 0 && result.rem < 0)
        {
          ++result.quot;
          result.rem -= denom;
        }
    
      return result;
    }