(a^b) mod c

hi all, i need your help. i want to use (a^b) mod c
but in matlab if i use mod((a^b),c);
it's return inf
because a,b,c are too big.
are you know how to do that with another way, in matlab?? for example use a loop ??

1 Commento

Oleg Komarov
Oleg Komarov il 29 Giu 2011
- What do you mean by too big?
- Are they scalars?

Accedi per commentare.

Risposte (2)

Jan
Jan il 29 Giu 2011

1 voto

If b is not prime, but x * y:
(a^b) mod c = (a^x mod c)^y mod c
But if b is prime, this does not help to avoid the overflow. Then I'd try FEX:John's VPI or FEX:Ben Barrowes' Multiple Precision Toolbox.
EDITED: A loop method:
function r = ApowerBmodC(a, b, c)
r = 1;
for i = 1:b
r = mod(a * r, c);
end
Then "ApowerBmodC(1234, 5678, 1256)" replies 1112. For these numbers the "(a^x mod c)^y mod c" does not help, because 5678 = 2*17*167 and "mod(1234^2, 1256)^17" is 4.38e45 such that trailing figures are all zero due to rounding.

3 Commenti

zikrullah muhammad
zikrullah muhammad il 29 Giu 2011
thank you, but if b prime what must i do??
Jan
Jan il 29 Giu 2011
Have you looked at the two posted links?
Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski il 29 Giu 2011
VPI is back !!

Accedi per commentare.

Oleg Komarov
Oleg Komarov il 29 Giu 2011

0 voti

If you're looking for elementwise elevation to a power then:
mod(a.^b,c)

1 Commento

zikrullah muhammad
zikrullah muhammad il 29 Giu 2011
i need loop, so the number not bigger than realmax
for example:
mod((1234^5678),1256)---> it's return NaN

Accedi per commentare.

Categorie

Tag

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!

Translated by