Why is $5$ the remainder of $5 over 13$?












1















I don't understand why the remainder of $5 over 13$ is $5$. I know that the DA tells us that $5 = 0(13) + r$ so the remainder has to be $5$ based on this, but I'm a little unsure of why/how it works











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  • By definition the remainder of $,5div 13,$ is the least nonnegative element of $, 5+13,Bbb Z$ $ $
    – Bill Dubuque
    Dec 9 at 1:06


















1















I don't understand why the remainder of $5 over 13$ is $5$. I know that the DA tells us that $5 = 0(13) + r$ so the remainder has to be $5$ based on this, but I'm a little unsure of why/how it works











share|cite|improve this question
























  • By definition the remainder of $,5div 13,$ is the least nonnegative element of $, 5+13,Bbb Z$ $ $
    – Bill Dubuque
    Dec 9 at 1:06
















1












1








1








I don't understand why the remainder of $5 over 13$ is $5$. I know that the DA tells us that $5 = 0(13) + r$ so the remainder has to be $5$ based on this, but I'm a little unsure of why/how it works











share|cite|improve this question
















I don't understand why the remainder of $5 over 13$ is $5$. I know that the DA tells us that $5 = 0(13) + r$ so the remainder has to be $5$ based on this, but I'm a little unsure of why/how it works








elementary-number-theory divisibility






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edited Dec 9 at 8:25









Batominovski

33.7k33292




33.7k33292










asked Dec 9 at 0:55









ming

3165




3165












  • By definition the remainder of $,5div 13,$ is the least nonnegative element of $, 5+13,Bbb Z$ $ $
    – Bill Dubuque
    Dec 9 at 1:06




















  • By definition the remainder of $,5div 13,$ is the least nonnegative element of $, 5+13,Bbb Z$ $ $
    – Bill Dubuque
    Dec 9 at 1:06


















By definition the remainder of $,5div 13,$ is the least nonnegative element of $, 5+13,Bbb Z$ $ $
– Bill Dubuque
Dec 9 at 1:06






By definition the remainder of $,5div 13,$ is the least nonnegative element of $, 5+13,Bbb Z$ $ $
– Bill Dubuque
Dec 9 at 1:06












3 Answers
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3














For positive integers, "divide by $13$" means "subtract the largest multiple of $13$ you can while still remaining nonnegative". The remainder is what's left. If you think in terms of objects, you remove them from the set you start with, in batches of $13$.



If you start with $5$ you can't subtract any multiples of $13$ so all $5$ are left.



You don't need a formal "division algorithm" for this. It works fine if all you know about division is repeated subtraction (which is what the division algorithm formalizes).






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    1














    For an intuitive approach: If you have five candies to give out equally to 13 children, each child gets 0 candies, and there remain 5 undistributed candies.






    share|cite|improve this answer





























      0














      Well $r$ has to be in a set ${0,1,2...,12}$. Which of this fullfiles equation you wrote?



      And this is always true if you divide $a$ by $b$ and $a<b$. You will get $r=a$:



      $$ a = 0cdot b +rimplies r=a$$






      share|cite|improve this answer





















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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        3














        For positive integers, "divide by $13$" means "subtract the largest multiple of $13$ you can while still remaining nonnegative". The remainder is what's left. If you think in terms of objects, you remove them from the set you start with, in batches of $13$.



        If you start with $5$ you can't subtract any multiples of $13$ so all $5$ are left.



        You don't need a formal "division algorithm" for this. It works fine if all you know about division is repeated subtraction (which is what the division algorithm formalizes).






        share|cite|improve this answer


























          3














          For positive integers, "divide by $13$" means "subtract the largest multiple of $13$ you can while still remaining nonnegative". The remainder is what's left. If you think in terms of objects, you remove them from the set you start with, in batches of $13$.



          If you start with $5$ you can't subtract any multiples of $13$ so all $5$ are left.



          You don't need a formal "division algorithm" for this. It works fine if all you know about division is repeated subtraction (which is what the division algorithm formalizes).






          share|cite|improve this answer
























            3












            3








            3






            For positive integers, "divide by $13$" means "subtract the largest multiple of $13$ you can while still remaining nonnegative". The remainder is what's left. If you think in terms of objects, you remove them from the set you start with, in batches of $13$.



            If you start with $5$ you can't subtract any multiples of $13$ so all $5$ are left.



            You don't need a formal "division algorithm" for this. It works fine if all you know about division is repeated subtraction (which is what the division algorithm formalizes).






            share|cite|improve this answer












            For positive integers, "divide by $13$" means "subtract the largest multiple of $13$ you can while still remaining nonnegative". The remainder is what's left. If you think in terms of objects, you remove them from the set you start with, in batches of $13$.



            If you start with $5$ you can't subtract any multiples of $13$ so all $5$ are left.



            You don't need a formal "division algorithm" for this. It works fine if all you know about division is repeated subtraction (which is what the division algorithm formalizes).







            share|cite|improve this answer












            share|cite|improve this answer



            share|cite|improve this answer










            answered Dec 9 at 1:00









            Ethan Bolker

            41.2k547108




            41.2k547108























                1














                For an intuitive approach: If you have five candies to give out equally to 13 children, each child gets 0 candies, and there remain 5 undistributed candies.






                share|cite|improve this answer


























                  1














                  For an intuitive approach: If you have five candies to give out equally to 13 children, each child gets 0 candies, and there remain 5 undistributed candies.






                  share|cite|improve this answer
























                    1












                    1








                    1






                    For an intuitive approach: If you have five candies to give out equally to 13 children, each child gets 0 candies, and there remain 5 undistributed candies.






                    share|cite|improve this answer












                    For an intuitive approach: If you have five candies to give out equally to 13 children, each child gets 0 candies, and there remain 5 undistributed candies.







                    share|cite|improve this answer












                    share|cite|improve this answer



                    share|cite|improve this answer










                    answered Dec 9 at 1:04









                    paw88789

                    29k12349




                    29k12349























                        0














                        Well $r$ has to be in a set ${0,1,2...,12}$. Which of this fullfiles equation you wrote?



                        And this is always true if you divide $a$ by $b$ and $a<b$. You will get $r=a$:



                        $$ a = 0cdot b +rimplies r=a$$






                        share|cite|improve this answer


























                          0














                          Well $r$ has to be in a set ${0,1,2...,12}$. Which of this fullfiles equation you wrote?



                          And this is always true if you divide $a$ by $b$ and $a<b$. You will get $r=a$:



                          $$ a = 0cdot b +rimplies r=a$$






                          share|cite|improve this answer
























                            0












                            0








                            0






                            Well $r$ has to be in a set ${0,1,2...,12}$. Which of this fullfiles equation you wrote?



                            And this is always true if you divide $a$ by $b$ and $a<b$. You will get $r=a$:



                            $$ a = 0cdot b +rimplies r=a$$






                            share|cite|improve this answer












                            Well $r$ has to be in a set ${0,1,2...,12}$. Which of this fullfiles equation you wrote?



                            And this is always true if you divide $a$ by $b$ and $a<b$. You will get $r=a$:



                            $$ a = 0cdot b +rimplies r=a$$







                            share|cite|improve this answer












                            share|cite|improve this answer



                            share|cite|improve this answer










                            answered Dec 9 at 0:57









                            greedoid

                            37.7k114794




                            37.7k114794






























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