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9.201 MOD
— Remainder function
- Description:
MOD(A,P)
computes the remainder of the division of A by P.- Standard:
Fortran 77 and later, has overloads that are GNU extensions
- Class:
Elemental function
- Syntax:
RESULT = MOD(A, P)
- Arguments:
A Shall be a scalar of type INTEGER
orREAL
.P Shall be a scalar of the same type and kind as A and not equal to zero. (As a GNU extension, arguments of different kinds are permitted.) - Return value:
The return value is the result of
A - (INT(A/P) * P)
. The type and kind of the return value is the same as that of the arguments. The returned value has the same sign as A and a magnitude less than the magnitude of P. (As a GNU extension, kind is the largest kind of the actual arguments.)- Example:
program test_mod print *, mod(17,3) print *, mod(17.5,5.5) print *, mod(17.5d0,5.5) print *, mod(17.5,5.5d0) print *, mod(-17,3) print *, mod(-17.5,5.5) print *, mod(-17.5d0,5.5) print *, mod(-17.5,5.5d0) print *, mod(17,-3) print *, mod(17.5,-5.5) print *, mod(17.5d0,-5.5) print *, mod(17.5,-5.5d0) end program test_mod
- Specific names:
Name Arguments Return type Standard MOD(A,P)
INTEGER A,P
INTEGER
Fortran 77 and later AMOD(A,P)
REAL(4) A,P
REAL(4)
Fortran 77 and later DMOD(A,P)
REAL(8) A,P
REAL(8)
Fortran 77 and later BMOD(A,P)
INTEGER(1) A,P
INTEGER(1)
GNU extension IMOD(A,P)
INTEGER(2) A,P
INTEGER(2)
GNU extension JMOD(A,P)
INTEGER(4) A,P
INTEGER(4)
GNU extension KMOD(A,P)
INTEGER(8) A,P
INTEGER(8)
GNU extension - See also:
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