200+100%2

asked by guest
on Nov 26, 2024 at 1:22 am



You asked:

Evaluate the expression: \(200 + 100 \:\%\: 2\)

MathBot Answer:

\[200 + 100 \:\%\: 2 = 200\]


\[\begin{aligned}200 + 100 \:\%\: 2& = 200 + \left(100 \:\%\: 2\right)\\& = 200 + 0\\& = 200\end{aligned}\]


The notation \(m \% n\) denotes the remainder of the integer \(m\) divided by the integer \(n\). \(m \% n = r\) means that given integers \(m\) and \(n\), where \(n\) is non-zero, there exist integers \(q\) and \(r\), where \(\lvert r \rvert < \lvert n \rvert\), such that \(m = q n + r\). MathBot adopts the convention that the remainder \(r\) and the divisor \(n\) share the same sign. Alternate notations for \(m \% n\) are \(\operatorname{mod}(m, n)\) and \(m \bmod n\).