fornaxx's blog

By fornaxx, history, 17 hours ago, In English

Result: x % n = x & (n-1), where n is some power of 2 i.e. n = 1 << i.

Why this works?

Lets take an example of 14 % 4,

14 = 1110 = 8(4th-Bit) + 4(3rd-Bit) + 2(2nd-Bit) + 1(1st-Bit)
14 = 8 + 4 + 2 + 0
14 = (4*2) + (4) + 2 + 0

This implies 14 % 4 = (4*3 + 2) % 4 = 2 % 4 = 2 i.e. only the last two bits of 14 contribute to the remainder when dividing by 4. In general, when dividing by 1 << i, only the last i bits of x determine the remainder. This remainder can be computed efficiently with x & (n - 1).

Uses

Though a simple observation, but can be leveraged to solve some interesting variations of problem, try Make Almost Equal With Mod.

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17 hours ago, # |
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Have you used this technique within more complex data structures, like circular buffers or ring arrays? I’m curious if the trick applies well to these types of use cases.

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    8 hours ago, # ^ |
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    Not yet, but I would like to try. Do you have any problem on those topics?

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10 hours ago, # |
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this is also useful in solving 2036F - XORificator 3000