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c# - Why is the division result between two integers truncated?

All experienced programmers in C# (I think this comes from C) are used to cast on of the integers in a division to get the decimal / double / float result instead of the int (the real result truncated).

I'd like to know why is this implemented like this? Is there ANY good reason to truncate the result if both numbers are integer?

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C# traces its heritage to C, so the answer to "why is it like this in C#?" is a combination of "why is it like this in C?" and "was there no good reason to change?"

The approach of C is to have a fairly close correspondence between the high-level language and low-level operations. Processors generally implement integer division as returning a quotient and a remainder, both of which are of the same type as the operands.

(So my question would be, "why doesn't integer division in C-like languages return two integers", not "why doesn't it return a floating point value?")

The solution was to provide separate operations for division and remainder, each of which returns an integer. In the context of C, it's not surprising that the result of each of these operations is an integer. This is frequently more accurate than floating-point arithmetic. Consider the example from your comment of 7 / 3. This value cannot be represented by a finite binary number nor by a finite decimal number. In other words, on today's computers, we cannot accurately represent 7 / 3 unless we use integers! The most accurate representation of this fraction is "quotient 2, remainder 1".

So, was there no good reason to change? I can't think of any, and I can think of a few good reasons not to change. None of the other answers has mentioned Visual Basic which (at least through version 6) has two operators for dividing integers: / converts the integers to double, and returns a double, while performs normal integer arithmetic.

I learned about the operator after struggling to implement a binary search algorithm using floating-point division. It was really painful, and integer division came in like a breath of fresh air. Without it, there was lots of special handling to cover edge cases and off-by-one errors in the first draft of the procedure.

From that experience, I draw the conclusion that having different operators for dividing integers is confusing.

Another alternative would be to have only one integer operation, which always returns a double, and require programmers to truncate it. This means you have to perform two int->double conversions, a truncation and a double->int conversion every time you want integer division. And how many programmers would mistakenly round or floor the result instead of truncating it? It's a more complicated system, and at least as prone to programmer error, and slower.

Finally, in addition to binary search, there are many standard algorithms that employ integer arithmetic. One example is dividing collections of objects into sub-collections of similar size. Another is converting between indices in a 1-d array and coordinates in a 2-d matrix.

As far as I can see, no alternative to "int / int yields int" survives a cost-benefit analysis in terms of language usability, so there's no reason to change the behavior inherited from C.

In conclusion:

  • Integer division is frequently useful in many standard algorithms.
  • When the floating-point division of integers is needed, it may be invoked explicitly with a simple, short, and clear cast: (double)a / b rather than a / b
  • Other alternatives introduce more complication both the programmer and more clock cycles for the processor.

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