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authorErik Kundt <bitshift@posteo.org>2018-09-18 18:30:57 +0800
committerErik Kundt <bitshift@posteo.org>2018-09-26 23:19:40 +0800
commitd47ea5bb4784b69e71a905f853cde972ed40ad52 (patch)
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Documents modulus semantics.
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-rw-r--r--docs/types.rst22
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/docs/types.rst b/docs/types.rst
index 37ccd329..23336624 100644
--- a/docs/types.rst
+++ b/docs/types.rst
@@ -86,8 +86,8 @@ They wrap in two's complement notation, meaning that
for example ``uint256(0) - uint256(1) == 2**256 - 1``. You have to take these overflows
into account when designing safe smart contracts.
-Division and Modulus
-^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
+Division
+^^^^^^^^
Since the type of the result of an operation is always the type of one of
the operands, division on integers always results in an integer.
@@ -96,7 +96,23 @@ In Solidity, division rounds towards zero. This mean that ``int256(-5) / int256(
Note that in contrast, division on :ref:`literals<rational_literals>` results in fractional values
of arbitrary precision.
-Division by zero and modulus with zero throws a runtime exception.
+.. note::
+ Division by zero causes a failing assert.
+
+Modulo
+^^^^^^
+
+The modulo operation ``a % n`` yields the remainder ``r`` after the division of the operand ``a``
+by the operand ``n``, where ``q = int(a / n)`` and ``r = a - (n * q)``. This means that modulo
+results in the same sign as its left operand (or zero) and ``a % n == -(abs(a) % n)`` holds for negative ``a``:
+
+ * ``int256(5) % int256(2) == int256(1)``
+ * ``int256(5) % int256(-2) == int256(1)``
+ * ``int256(-5) % int256(2) == int256(-1)``
+ * ``int256(-5) % int256(-2) == int256(-1)``
+
+.. note::
+ Modulo with zero causes a failing assert.
Exponentiation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^