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The new home for Visual Studio documentation is Visual Studio 2017 Documentation on docs.microsoft.com.
The latest version of this topic can be found at fmod, fmodf.
Calculates the floating-point remainder.
Syntax
double fmod(
double x,
double y
);
float fmod(
float x,
float y
); // C++ only
long double fmod(
long double x,
long double y
); // C++ only
float fmodf(
float x,
float y
);
Parameters
x
, y
Floating-point values.
Return Value
fmod
returns the floating-point remainder of x
/ y
. If the value of y
is 0.0, fmod
returns a quiet NaN. For information about representation of a quiet NaN by the printf
family, see printf.
Remarks
The fmod
function calculates the floating-point remainder f
of x
/ y
such that x
= i
*
y
+ f
, where i
is an integer, f
has the same sign as x
, and the absolute value of f
is less than the absolute value of y
.
C++ allows overloading, so you can call overloads of fmod
. In a C program, fmod
always takes two doubles and returns a double.
Requirements
Function | Required header |
---|---|
fmod , fmodf |
<math.h> |
For additional compatibility information, see Compatibility in the Introduction.
Example
// crt_fmod.c
// This program displays a floating-point remainder.
#include <math.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main( void )
{
double w = -10.0, x = 3.0, z;
z = fmod( w, x );
printf( "The remainder of %.2f / %.2f is %f\n", w, x, z );
}
The remainder of -10.00 / 3.00 is -1.000000
.NET Framework Equivalent
See Also
Floating-Point Support
ceil, ceilf, ceill
fabs, fabsf, fabsl
floor, floorf, floorl
_CIfmod