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If Int(Rnd() * 5) >= 4
The line of code above is supposed to give a 40% chance of something happening. However, I do not understand how this 40% is calculated. Would Int(Rnd()*2.5) = 1 also give 40%?
I would very much appreciate if someone could explain how calculate percentages using this function.
Rnd returns a number from zero to just less than 1 (in a Single data type).
Int(Rnd() * 5) would return a value 0 to 4 (indeed 5 distinct values).
So, to give a 40% chance, compare the result < 2 (0 or 1), or the result > 2 (3 or 4).
I think you might have been confused by the result being zero-based.
Hope that helps.
I can not figure out the math that allows me to use a progress bar from 0-100% when the number is in the one hundred thousands.
I've tried:
156761 / 100 = 1567.61
156761 * 100 = 15676100
And I can not come up with anything else that allows that large of a number to be in the range of 0-100%.
Not sure if I get your question correctly...
First, if what you want is to show a progressbar with some value that's not 100... why not simply set the progres bar's Maximum to your value (156761 in your example) and set Value to whatever progress it has?
Now, if the progress bar for whatever reason has to be fixed from 0 to 100, you can use:
x / m * 100
Where m is the max value and x the progress value.
If you have a maximum value
x / max_value
And you want to convert it to percent.
y / 100
Then you need to do
x * 100 / max_value = y
You would need to know the maximum value your progress could reach (maybe a million) and divide by this to get a percentage of progress. So if your max was 1000000 you might do 100000/1000000= 0.1 to give 10%.
I have a bit of math question for my sql code. I want to be able to work out the following in my code using a mathematical formula, if anyone knows how I would love to know.
Any number 1->99 : 10
Any number 100->999 : 100
Any number 1000->9999 : 1000
...
Is there anyway to work out the 10 multiplier just from the value? I feel like this should be an easy formula but I cant seem to get it.
Thanks
How about this?
SELECT POWER(10, CONVERT(INT, LOG10(#Input)))
It takes the log base 10 of the input value (which returns the value of the exponent to which you would have to raise 10 to in order to get the input value), then it lops off the decimal portion leaving only the whole number, and then raises 10 to that power.
You just need logs and their opposite (power)...
power(10, floor(log10(x)))
As follows...
log10(99) = 1.9956351946
floor(1.9956351946) = 1
power(10, 1) = 10
This does, however, assume that your example is wrong and that 1 -> 9 should "round" to 1...
log10(9) = 0.95424250943
floor(0.95424250943) = 0
power(10, 0) = 1
Although both the functions perform the same operation, even they produce same o/p, what is basic difference between these two? Is there any performance related difference, if yes, then which one is better?
Thanks
The documentation is pretty clear on the difference:
NOTE
The REMAINDER function uses the round function in its formula, whereas
the MOD function uses the floor function in its formula.
In other words, when the arguments are positive integers, the mod function returns a positive number between 0 and the second argument. The remainder function returns a number whose absolute value is less than the second argument divided by 2.
The differences can be more striking for negative numbers. One example of a difference is:
REMAINDER(-15, 4)
MOD(-15, 4)
The first gives -3 and the second 1.
EDIT:
What is happening here? How many times does 4 go into -15. One method is "-4" times with a remained of 1. That is: -15 = 4*(-4) + 1. The other is "-3" times: -15 = 4*(-3) - 3.
The difference what is -15/4 expressed as an integer. Using floor, you get -4. Using round, you get -3.
The difference between MOD and REMAINDER function can be understood in the example below:
MOD(13,5): returns 3 whereas, REMAINDER (13,5) returns -2
A simple way to understand the difference is that MOD uses the floor function therefore it counts the occurrence of the second number within the first and returns what is left to complete the first number i.e. 2(5) gives 10 adding 3 gives 13 therefore MOD(13,5)=3
However, the REMAINDER uses a Round function it therefore gets the total number of the second number that could make up the first and then subtract the what makes it excess. i.e. 3(5) = 15 and subtracting 2 gives 13,therefore REMAINDER(13,5)= -2
REMAINDER (-15, 4): 4(-4) gives -16 and adding +1 gives -15 hence REMAINDER (-15,4)=+1
MOD (-15, 4): 3(-4) gives -12, adding -3 gives us -15 hence MOD(15,4)=-3
REMAINDER(-15, 4)--uses round without taking the sign of the number into
consideration.
hence -15/4= -3.75==> round(-3.75)= -4.--(ignore sign during round)
-4*4= -16
-15-(-16)=>1
There fore: REMAINDER(-15, 4)=1
MOD(-15, 4)----uses Floor without taking the sign of the number into
consideration.
-15/4= -3.75==> floor(-3.75)= -3.--(ignore sign in floor)
-3*4=-12
-15-(-12)=>-3
There fore: MOD(-15, 4)= -3
Mod(m,n) is so simple to understand.
Finding Value Mod() output value will always be the manually calculated remainder value when we divide m by n.
Finding Sign The sign of the output remains the same as the first parameter.
eg :
eg 1 : mod (11,3) is the remainder of 11/3 which is 2 and the same sign of 1st parameter. So output is 2
eg 2 : mod (-11,3) is the remainder of 11/3 which is 2 and the same sign of the 1st parameter. So the output is -2
Remainder(m,n) is a bit different
Finding Value You take two multiples of n, such that when multiplied gives the closest lower value and the closest upper value compared to the first parameter(m). The minimum difference between these values will be the output value
Finding Sign The sign of the output value will always be positive if the closest value is less than the first parameter and the if the closest value is greater than the 1st parameter then it will be negative.
eg :
eg 1 : remainder(10,3) The closest multiple values of 3 which are lesser and greater than 10 are 9(3x3) and 12(3x4). And the closest to 10 among 9 & 12 is 9. So the output will be the gap between 9 and 10 which is 1. The closest number is less than the 1st parameter. So the output is 1.
eg 2 : remainder(11,3) The closest multiple values of 11 which are lesser and greater than 11 are 9(3x3) and 12(3x4). And the closest to 12 among 9 & 12 is 12. So the output will be the gap between 12 and 11 which is 1. The closest number is greater than the 1st parameter. So the output is -1.
The question has long had an answer, but I thought some context would be helpful.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modulo_operation discusses the “modulo” operation, and the fact that it is based on the remainder after integer division. The problem is that the concept of “remainder” is not clearly defined where there are negative numbers.
Where negative numbers are involved, the difference between modulus and remainder is significant. Mathematically, the modulus operation maps an integer on to a range. This range begins at 0 and is cyclic. For example integer mod 3 is mapped on to the range:
0, 1, 2, 0, 1, 2, …
If the given integer is negative, the cycle is simply extended backwards. If, however, the modulus itself is negative, then the whole range is negative:
0, -2, -1, 0, -2, -1, …
https://rob.conery.io/2018/08/21/mod-and-remainder-are-not-the-same/ illustrates this as a clock with negative numbers.
The practical upshot of this is that the sign of the second number is the same as the sign of the result.
With a remainder, however, you attempt to divide the second number into the first number until you can’t go any more. The remaining difference is called the remainder. If the first number is negative, then, if you stop short, the remainder will be negative.
The practical upshot of which is that the sign of the first number is the sign of the result.
Most coding languages, including most variations of SQL, use a remainder calculation, but very often call it the modulus. And most languages use the notation a % b meaning a mod b.
Oracle, of course, has two functions, which should have been helpful. However, the first function, mod(), actually gives what everybody else calls the remainder. The second, remainder() gives a result which nobody else gives, due to the fact that it is focused on the nearest division. As per the documentation, the mod() functions uses the floor() function, while remainder() uses round().
If you want to compare the results, you can try:
SELECT
remainder(19,5) AS "Remainder ++",
remainder(-19,5) AS "Remainder -+",
remainder(19,-5) AS "Remainder +-",
remainder(-19,-5) AS "Remainder --",
mod(19,5) AS "Mod ++",
mod(-19,5) AS "Mod -+",
mod(19,-5) AS "Mod +-",
mod(-19,-5) AS "Mod --",
mod(mod(19,5) + 5,5) AS "Modulo ++",
mod(mod(-19,5) + 5,5) AS "Modulo ++",
mod(mod(19,-5) + -5,-5) AS "Modulo ++",
mod(mod(-19,-5) + -5,-5) AS "Modulo ++"
FROM DUAL
;
The modulo calculation gives the true modulus, according to https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Remainder
In all, you probably want the remainder as the most natural interpretation, and so you will use mod() to get this result.
I know the modulus (%) operator calculates the remainder of a division. How can I identify a situation where I would need to use the modulus operator?
I know I can use the modulus operator to see whether a number is even or odd and prime or composite, but that's about it. I don't often think in terms of remainders. I'm sure the modulus operator is useful, and I would like to learn to take advantage of it.
I just have problems identifying where the modulus operator is applicable. In various programming situations, it is difficult for me to see a problem and realize "Hey! The remainder of division would work here!".
Imagine that you have an elapsed time in seconds and you want to convert this to hours, minutes, and seconds:
h = s / 3600;
m = (s / 60) % 60;
s = s % 60;
0 % 3 = 0;
1 % 3 = 1;
2 % 3 = 2;
3 % 3 = 0;
Did you see what it did? At the last step it went back to zero. This could be used in situations like:
To check if N is divisible by M (for example, odd or even)
or
N is a multiple of M.
To put a cap of a particular value. In this case 3.
To get the last M digits of a number -> N % (10^M).
I use it for progress bars and the like that mark progress through a big loop. The progress is only reported every nth time through the loop, or when count%n == 0.
I've used it when restricting a number to a certain multiple:
temp = x - (x % 10); //Restrict x to being a multiple of 10
Wrapping values (like a clock).
Provide finite fields to symmetric key algorithms.
Bitwise operations.
And so on.
One use case I saw recently was when you need to reverse a number. So that 123456 becomes 654321 for example.
int number = 123456;
int reversed = 0;
while ( number > 0 ) {
# The modulus here retrieves the last digit in the specified number
# In the first iteration of this loop it's going to be 6, then 5, ...
# We are multiplying reversed by 10 first, to move the number one decimal place to the left.
# For example, if we are at the second iteration of this loop,
# reversed gonna be 6, so 6 * 10 + 12345 % 10 => 60 + 5
reversed = reversed * 10 + number % 10;
number = number / 10;
}
Example. You have message of X bytes, but in your protocol maximum size is Y and Y < X. Try to write small app that splits message into packets and you will run into mod :)
There are many instances where it is useful.
If you need to restrict a number to be within a certain range you can use mod. For example, to generate a random number between 0 and 99 you might say:
num = MyRandFunction() % 100;
Any time you have division and want to express the remainder other than in decimal, the mod operator is appropriate. Things that come to mind are generally when you want to do something human-readable with the remainder. Listing how many items you could put into buckets and saying "5 left over" is good.
Also, if you're ever in a situation where you may be accruing rounding errors, modulo division is good. If you're dividing by 3 quite often, for example, you don't want to be passing .33333 around as the remainder. Passing the remainder and divisor (i.e. the fraction) is appropriate.
As #jweyrich says, wrapping values. I've found mod very handy when I have a finite list and I want to iterate over it in a loop - like a fixed list of colors for some UI elements, like chart series, where I want all the series to be different, to the extent possible, but when I've run out of colors, just to start over at the beginning. This can also be used with, say, patterns, so that the second time red comes around, it's dashed; the third time, dotted, etc. - but mod is just used to get red, green, blue, red, green, blue, forever.
Calculation of prime numbers
The modulo can be useful to convert and split total minutes to "hours and minutes":
hours = minutes / 60
minutes_left = minutes % 60
In the hours bit we need to strip the decimal portion and that will depend on the language you are using.
We can then rearrange the output accordingly.
Converting linear data structure to matrix structure:
where a is index of linear data, and b is number of items per row:
row = a/b
column = a mod b
Note above is simplified logic: a must be offset -1 before dividing & the result must be normalized +1.
Example: (3 rows of 4)
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
(7 - 1)/4 + 1 = 2
7 is in row 2
(7 - 1) mod 4 + 1 = 3
7 is in column 3
Another common use of modulus: hashing a number by place. Suppose you wanted to store year & month in a six digit number 195810. month = 195810 mod 100 all digits 3rd from right are divisible by 100 so the remainder is the 2 rightmost digits in this case the month is 10. To extract the year 195810 / 100 yields 1958.
Modulus is also very useful if for some crazy reason you need to do integer division and get a decimal out, and you can't convert the integer into a number that supports decimal division, or if you need to return a fraction instead of a decimal.
I'll be using % as the modulus operator
For example
2/4 = 0
where doing this
2/4 = 0 and 2 % 4 = 2
So you can be really crazy and let's say that you want to allow the user to input a numerator and a divisor, and then show them the result as a whole number, and then a fractional number.
whole Number = numerator/divisor
fractionNumerator = numerator % divisor
fractionDenominator = divisor
Another case where modulus division is useful is if you are increasing or decreasing a number and you want to contain the number to a certain range of number, but when you get to the top or bottom you don't want to just stop. You want to loop up to the bottom or top of the list respectively.
Imagine a function where you are looping through an array.
Function increase Or Decrease(variable As Integer) As Void
n = (n + variable) % (listString.maxIndex + 1)
Print listString[n]
End Function
The reason that it is n = (n + variable) % (listString.maxIndex + 1) is to allow for the max index to be accounted.
Those are just a few of the things that I have had to use modulus for in my programming of not just desktop applications, but in robotics and simulation environments.
Computing the greatest common divisor
Determining if a number is a palindrome
Determining if a number consists of only ...
Determining how many ... a number consists of...
My favorite use is for iteration.
Say you have a counter you are incrementing and want to then grab from a known list a corresponding items, but you only have n items to choose from and you want to repeat a cycle.
var indexFromB = (counter-1)%n+1;
Results (counter=indexFromB) given n=3:
`1=1`
`2=2`
`3=3`
`4=1`
`5=2`
`6=3`
...
Best use of modulus operator I have seen so for is to check if the Array we have is a rotated version of original array.
A = [1,2,3,4,5,6]
B = [5,6,1,2,3,4]
Now how to check if B is rotated version of A ?
Step 1: If A's length is not same as B's length then for sure its not a rotated version.
Step 2: Check the index of first element of A in B. Here first element of A is 1. And its index in B is 2(assuming your programming language has zero based index).
lets store that index in variable "Key"
Step 3: Now how to check that if B is rotated version of A how ??
This is where modulus function rocks :
for (int i = 0; i< A.length; i++)
{
// here modulus function would check the proper order. Key here is 2 which we recieved from Step 2
int j = [Key+i]%A.length;
if (A[i] != B[j])
{
return false;
}
}
return true;
It's an easy way to tell if a number is even or odd. Just do # mod 2, if it is 0 it is even, 1 it is odd.
Often, in a loop, you want to do something every k'th iteration, where k is 0 < k < n, assuming 0 is the start index and n is the length of the loop.
So, you'd do something like:
int k = 5;
int n = 50;
for(int i = 0;i < n;++i)
{
if(i % k == 0) // true at 0, 5, 10, 15..
{
// do something
}
}
Or, you want to keep something whitin a certain bound. Remember, when you take an arbitrary number mod something, it must produce a value between 0 and that number - 1.