math
numbers
There is a single operator in JavaScript, capable of providing the remainder of a division operation. Two numbers are passed as parameters. The first parameter divided by the second parameter will have a remainder, possibly zero. Return that value.
remainder(1, 3) // 1
remainder(3, 4) // 3
remainder(-9, 45) // -9
remainder(5, 5) // 0
function remainder(x, y) {
return x % y ;
}
let Test = (function(){
return {
assertEquals:function(actual,expected){
if(actual !== expected){
let errorMsg = `actual is ${actual},${expected} is expected`;
throw new Error(errorMsg);
}
}
}
})();
Test.assertEquals(remainder(7, 2), 1)
Test.assertEquals(remainder(3, 4), 3)
Test.assertEquals(remainder(-9, 45), -9)
Test.assertEquals(remainder(5, 5), 0)