Also, addressing the general topic, if you're wanting both the quotient and the remainder then check to see if there's an intrinsic that can give you both results without having to do the division twice. When the CPU does integer division it actually produces both results, regardless of whether you asked for division or modulus. It's not a huge issue, but division is the heaviest integer math operation for the cpu by a wide margin, so in anything where performance matters it can be good to know if there's an intrinsic. (Don't prematurely optimize, but don't prematurely pessimize either.)
Edit: Apparently there's one in std::div, which is convenient, but poking around for a minute I see that it's common for modern compilers to optimize this problem away in most cases.
I was sort of going to "ask" about that. I knew that division was the "heaviest" integer math for the most part. So I was going to ask if the CPU did something to store both results. though I didn't want to seem like I was trying to "optimize" something or anything like that. I was going to ask out of curiosity. Though felt like it could go beyond this topic and didn't want to get into premature optimization. lol. Just my nerd curiosity. :) Thanks.
Some practical everyday uses:
// I want to trigger something every 7 executions:
static int count = 0;
count = ++count % 7;
if( count ) {do something}
// I want to cycle 0-6 repeatedly.
static int count = 0;
count = ++count % 7;
In the first case the 'if' relies on the fact that the only "true" condition is when something is zero. In the second case a value modded by any higher value results in the same value, it goes to zero when modded with itself. Basically a variable in both cases is going to step from 0 to mod value minus one, or 0-6 in this case and keep repeating.
I think I use the first case with the 'if' statement more often but I know I use the second case on occasion also.
Like Khatharr said, in C/C++ it would actually execute every time except when count is 0.
As a quick test:
for(index = 0; index < 10; ++index)
{
count = ++count % 7;
if(count)
{
std::cout << count << " ";
}
}
produced output:
1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3
Yup, I goofed.. Please don't hang me at the weekly horribly backwards post meeting GameDev holds every week.
I won't...to much. :).
I saw your new post after I posted mine, so I edited. Gamedev didn't notify me of a new post with the code editor up. Or i didn't see it. lol. :)