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18 March, 05:03

In divison why should the remainder not be greater the the divisor

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  1. 18 March, 05:41
    0
    If the remainder is greater than the divisor, then this means that another divisor could have been added.

    For example, 7/3

    If I said the result was 1 and the remainder was 4, 3 can fit into 4, meaning that the remainder (What remains when you have calculated the result) would be incorrect.

    The correct answer would be 2 remainder 1.

    The remainder is there to simplify division. If I did 7/3 normally, it would be 2.3333333333 recurring, giving us an "ugly" result. The remainder therefore gives us whole number results.
  2. 18 March, 07:34
    0
    You shouldn't have a remainder greater than the divisor, because it means that another number can be multiplied.
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