![Division by zero](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi9hL2EwL1JlY2lwcm9jYWxfZnVuY3Rpb24ucG5nLzE2MDBweC1SZWNpcHJvY2FsX2Z1bmN0aW9uLnBuZw==.png )
In mathematics, division by zero, division where the divisor (denominator) is zero, is a unique and problematic special case. Using fraction notation, the general example can be written as , where is the dividend (numerator).
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWhMMkV3TDFKbFkybHdjbTlqWVd4ZlpuVnVZM1JwYjI0dWNHNW5Mekl5TUhCNExWSmxZMmx3Y205allXeGZablZ1WTNScGIyNHVjRzVuLnBuZw==.png)
The usual definition of the quotient in elementary arithmetic is the number which yields the dividend when multiplied by the divisor. That is, is equivalent to By this definition, the quotient is nonsensical, as the product is always rather than some other number Following the ordinary rules of elementary algebra while allowing division by zero can create a mathematical fallacy, a subtle mistake leading to absurd results. To prevent this, the arithmetic of real numbers and more general numerical structures called fields leaves division by zero undefined, and situations where division by zero might occur must be treated with care. Since any number multiplied by zero is zero, the expression is also undefined.
Calculus studies the behavior of functions in the limit as their input tends to some value. When a real function can be expressed as a fraction whose denominator tends to zero, the output of the function becomes arbitrarily large, and is said to "tend to infinity", a type of mathematical singularity. For example, the reciprocal function, tends to infinity as tends to When both the numerator and the denominator tend to zero at the same input, the expression is said to take an indeterminate form, as the resulting limit depends on the specific functions forming the fraction and cannot be determined from their separate limits.
As an alternative to the common convention of working with fields such as the real numbers and leaving division by zero undefined, it is possible to define the result of division by zero in other ways, resulting in different number systems. For example, the quotient can be defined to equal zero; it can be defined to equal a new explicit point at infinity, sometimes denoted by the infinity symbol ; or it can be defined to result in signed infinity, with positive or negative sign depending on the sign of the dividend. In these number systems division by zero is no longer a special exception per se, but the point or points at infinity involve their own new types of exceptional behavior.
In computing, an error may result from an attempt to divide by zero. Depending on the context and the type of number involved, dividing by zero may evaluate to positive or negative infinity, return a special not-a-number value, or crash the program, among other possibilities.
Elementary arithmetic
The meaning of division
The division can be conceptually interpreted in several ways.
In quotitive division, the dividend is imagined to be split up into parts of size
(the divisor), and the quotient
is the number of resulting parts. For example, imagine ten slices of bread are to be made into sandwiches, each requiring two slices of bread. A total of five sandwiches can be made (
). Now imagine instead that zero slices of bread are required per sandwich (perhaps a lettuce wrap). Arbitrarily many such sandwiches can be made from ten slices of bread, as the bread is irrelevant.
The quotitive concept of division lends itself to calculation by repeated subtraction: dividing entails counting how many times the divisor can be subtracted before the dividend runs out. Because no finite number of subtractions of zero will ever exhaust a non-zero dividend, calculating division by zero in this way never terminates. Such an interminable division-by-zero algorithm is physically exhibited by some mechanical calculators.
In partitive division, the dividend is imagined to be split into
parts, and the quotient
is the resulting size of each part. For example, imagine ten cookies are to be divided among two friends. Each friend will receive five cookies (
). Now imagine instead that the ten cookies are to be divided among zero friends. How many cookies will each friend receive? Since there are no friends, this is an absurdity.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWhMMkUwTDFOc2IzQmxjMTloYzE5eVlYUnBiM011Y0c1bkx6SXlNSEI0TFZOc2IzQmxjMTloYzE5eVlYUnBiM011Y0c1bi5wbmc=.png)
In another interpretation, the quotient represents the ratio
For example, a cake recipe might call for ten cups of flour and two cups of sugar, a ratio of
or, proportionally,
To scale this recipe to larger or smaller quantities of cake, a ratio of flour to sugar proportional to
could be maintained, for instance one cup of flour and one-fifth cup of sugar, or fifty cups of flour and ten cups of sugar. Now imagine a sugar-free cake recipe calls for ten cups of flour and zero cups of sugar. The ratio
or proportionally
is perfectly sensible: it just means that the cake has no sugar. However, the question "How many parts flour for each part sugar?" still has no meaningful numerical answer.
A geometrical appearance of the division-as-ratio interpretation is the slope of a straight line in the Cartesian plane. The slope is defined to be the "rise" (change in vertical coordinate) divided by the "run" (change in horizontal coordinate) along the line. When this is written using the symmetrical ratio notation, a horizontal line has slope and a vertical line has slope
However, if the slope is taken to be a single real number then a horizontal line has slope
while a vertical line has an undefined slope, since in real-number arithmetic the quotient
is undefined. The real-valued slope
of a line through the origin is the vertical coordinate of the intersection between the line and a vertical line at horizontal coordinate
dashed black in the figure. The vertical red and dashed black lines are parallel, so they have no intersection in the plane. Sometimes they are said to intersect at a point at infinity, and the ratio
is represented by a new number
; see § Projectively extended real line below. Vertical lines are sometimes said to have an "infinitely steep" slope.
Inverse of multiplication
Division is the inverse of multiplication, meaning that multiplying and then dividing by the same non-zero quantity, or vice versa, leaves an original quantity unchanged; for example . Thus a division problem such as
can be solved by rewriting it as an equivalent equation involving multiplication,
where
represents the same unknown quantity, and then finding the value for which the statement is true; in this case the unknown quantity is
because
so therefore
An analogous problem involving division by zero, requires determining an unknown quantity satisfying
However, any number multiplied by zero is zero rather than six, so there exists no number which can substitute for
to make a true statement.
When the problem is changed to the equivalent multiplicative statement is
; in this case any value can be substituted for the unknown quantity to yield a true statement, so there is no single number which can be assigned as the quotient
Because of these difficulties, quotients where the divisor is zero are traditionally taken to be undefined, and division by zero is not allowed.
Fallacies
A compelling reason for not allowing division by zero is that allowing it leads to fallacies.
When working with numbers, it is easy to identify an illegal division by zero. For example:
- From
and
one gets
Cancelling 0 from both sides yields
, a false statement.
The fallacy here arises from the assumption that it is legitimate to cancel 0 like any other number, whereas, in fact, doing so is a form of division by 0.
Using algebra, it is possible to disguise a division by zero to obtain an invalid proof. For example:
This is essentially the same fallacious computation as the previous numerical version, but the division by zero was obfuscated because we wrote 0 as x − 1.
Early attempts
The Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta of Brahmagupta (c. 598–668) is the earliest text to treat zero as a number in its own right and to define operations involving zero. According to Brahmagupta,
A positive or negative number when divided by zero is a fraction with the zero as denominator. Zero divided by a negative or positive number is either zero or is expressed as a fraction with zero as numerator and the finite quantity as denominator. Zero divided by zero is zero.
In 830, Mahāvīra unsuccessfully tried to correct the mistake Brahmagupta made in his book Ganita Sara Samgraha: "A number remains unchanged when divided by zero."
Bhāskara II's Līlāvatī (12th century) proposed that division by zero results in an infinite quantity,
A quantity divided by zero becomes a fraction the denominator of which is zero. This fraction is termed an infinite quantity. In this quantity consisting of that which has zero for its divisor, there is no alteration, though many may be inserted or extracted; as no change takes place in the infinite and immutable God when worlds are created or destroyed, though numerous orders of beings are absorbed or put forth.
Historically, one of the earliest recorded references to the mathematical impossibility of assigning a value to is contained in Anglo-Irish philosopher George Berkeley's criticism of infinitesimal calculus in 1734 in The Analyst ("ghosts of departed quantities").
Calculus
Calculus studies the behavior of functions using the concept of a limit, the value to which a function's output tends as its input tends to some specific value. The notation means that the value of the function
can be made arbitrarily close to
by choosing
sufficiently close to
In the case where the limit of the real function increases without bound as
tends to
the function is not defined at
a type of mathematical singularity. Instead, the function is said to "tend to infinity", denoted
and its graph has the line
as a vertical asymptote. While such a function is not formally defined for
and the infinity symbol
in this case does not represent any specific real number, such limits are informally said to "equal infinity". If the value of the function decreases without bound, the function is said to "tend to negative infinity",
In some cases a function tends to two different values when
tends to
from above (
) and below (
); such a function has two distinct one-sided limits.
A basic example of an infinite singularity is the reciprocal function, which tends to positive or negative infinity as
tends to
:
In most cases, the limit of a quotient of functions is equal to the quotient of the limits of each function separately,
However, when a function is constructed by dividing two functions whose separate limits are both equal to then the limit of the result cannot be determined from the separate limits, so is said to take an indeterminate form, informally written
(Another indeterminate form,
results from dividing two functions whose limits both tend to infinity.) Such a limit may equal any real value, may tend to infinity, or may not converge at all, depending on the particular functions. For example, in
the separate limits of the numerator and denominator are , so we have the indeterminate form
, but simplifying the quotient first shows that the limit exists:
Alternative number systems
Extended real line
The affinely extended real numbers are obtained from the real numbers by adding two new numbers
and
read as "positive infinity" and "negative infinity" respectively, and representing points at infinity. With the addition of
the concept of a "limit at infinity" can be made to work like a finite limit. When dealing with both positive and negative extended real numbers, the expression
is usually left undefined. However, in contexts where only non-negative values are considered, it is often convenient to define
.
Projectively extended real line
The set is the projectively extended real line, which is a one-point compactification of the real line. Here
means an unsigned infinity or point at infinity, an infinite quantity that is neither positive nor negative. This quantity satisfies
, which is necessary in this context. In this structure,
can be defined for nonzero a, and
when a is not
. It is the natural way to view the range of the tangent function and cotangent functions of trigonometry: tan(x) approaches the single point at infinity as x approaches either +π/2 or −π/2 from either direction.
This definition leads to many interesting results. However, the resulting algebraic structure is not a field, and should not be expected to behave like one. For example, is undefined in this extension of the real line.
Riemann sphere
The subject of complex analysis applies the concepts of calculus in the complex numbers. Of major importance in this subject is the extended complex numbers the set of complex numbers with a single additional number appended, usually denoted by the infinity symbol
and representing a point at infinity, which is defined to be contained in every exterior domain, making those its topological neighborhoods.
This can intuitively be thought of as wrapping up the infinite edges of the complex plane and pinning them together at the single point a one-point compactification, making the extended complex numbers topologically equivalent to a sphere. This equivalence can be extended to a metrical equivalence by mapping each complex number to a point on the sphere via inverse stereographic projection, with the resulting spherical distance applied as a new definition of distance between complex numbers; and in general the geometry of the sphere can be studied using complex arithmetic, and conversely complex arithmetic can be interpreted in terms of spherical geometry. As a consequence, the set of extended complex numbers is often called the Riemann sphere. The set is usually denoted by the symbol for the complex numbers decorated by an asterisk, overline, tilde, or circumflex, for example
In the extended complex numbers, for any nonzero complex number ordinary complex arithmetic is extended by the additional rules
However,
,
, and
are left undefined.
Higher mathematics
The four basic operations – addition, subtraction, multiplication and division – as applied to whole numbers (positive integers), with some restrictions, in elementary arithmetic are used as a framework to support the extension of the realm of numbers to which they apply. For instance, to make it possible to subtract any whole number from another, the realm of numbers must be expanded to the entire set of integers in order to incorporate the negative integers. Similarly, to support division of any integer by any other, the realm of numbers must expand to the rational numbers. During this gradual expansion of the number system, care is taken to ensure that the "extended operations", when applied to the older numbers, do not produce different results. Loosely speaking, since division by zero has no meaning (is undefined) in the whole number setting, this remains true as the setting expands to the real or even complex numbers.
As the realm of numbers to which these operations can be applied expands there are also changes in how the operations are viewed. For instance, in the realm of integers, subtraction is no longer considered a basic operation since it can be replaced by addition of signed numbers. Similarly, when the realm of numbers expands to include the rational numbers, division is replaced by multiplication by certain rational numbers. In keeping with this change of viewpoint, the question, "Why can't we divide by zero?", becomes "Why can't a rational number have a zero denominator?". Answering this revised question precisely requires close examination of the definition of rational numbers.
In the modern approach to constructing the field of real numbers, the rational numbers appear as an intermediate step in the development that is founded on set theory. First, the natural numbers (including zero) are established on an axiomatic basis such as Peano's axiom system and then this is expanded to the ring of integers. The next step is to define the rational numbers keeping in mind that this must be done using only the sets and operations that have already been established, namely, addition, multiplication and the integers. Starting with the set of ordered pairs of integers, {(a, b)} with b ≠ 0, define a binary relation on this set by (a, b) ≃ (c, d) if and only if ad = bc. This relation is shown to be an equivalence relation and its equivalence classes are then defined to be the rational numbers. It is in the formal proof that this relation is an equivalence relation that the requirement that the second coordinate is not zero is needed (for verifying transitivity).
Although division by zero cannot be sensibly defined with real numbers and integers, it is possible to consistently define it, or similar operations, in other mathematical structures.
Non-standard analysis
In the hyperreal numbers, division by zero is still impossible, but division by non-zero infinitesimals is possible. The same holds true in the surreal numbers.
Distribution theory
In distribution theory one can extend the function to a distribution on the whole space of real numbers (in effect by using Cauchy principal values). It does not, however, make sense to ask for a "value" of this distribution at x = 0; a sophisticated answer refers to the singular support of the distribution.
Linear algebra
In matrix algebra, square or rectangular blocks of numbers are manipulated as though they were numbers themselves: matrices can be added and multiplied, and in some cases, a version of division also exists. Dividing by a matrix means, more precisely, multiplying by its inverse. Not all matrices have inverses. For example, a matrix containing only zeros is not invertible.
One can define a pseudo-division, by setting a/b = ab+, in which b+ represents the pseudoinverse of b. It can be proven that if b−1 exists, then b+ = b−1. If b equals 0, then b+ = 0.
Abstract algebra
In abstract algebra, the integers, the rational numbers, the real numbers, and the complex numbers can be abstracted to more general algebraic structures, such as a commutative ring, which is a mathematical structure where addition, subtraction, and multiplication behave as they do in the more familiar number systems, but division may not be defined. Adjoining a multiplicative inverses to a commutative ring is called localization. However, the localization of every commutative ring at zero is the trivial ring, where , so nontrivial commutative rings do not have inverses at zero, and thus division by zero is undefined for nontrivial commutative rings.
Nevertheless, any number system that forms a commutative ring can be extended to a structure called a wheel in which division by zero is always possible. However, the resulting mathematical structure is no longer a commutative ring, as multiplication no longer distributes over addition. Furthermore, in a wheel, division of an element by itself no longer results in the multiplicative identity element , and if the original system was an integral domain, the multiplication in the wheel no longer results in a cancellative semigroup.
The concepts applied to standard arithmetic are similar to those in more general algebraic structures, such as rings and fields. In a field, every nonzero element is invertible under multiplication; as above, division poses problems only when attempting to divide by zero. This is likewise true in a skew field (which for this reason is called a division ring). However, in other rings, division by nonzero elements may also pose problems. For example, the ring Z/6Z of integers mod 6. The meaning of the expression should be the solution x of the equation
. But in the ring Z/6Z, 2 is a zero divisor. This equation has two distinct solutions, x = 1 and x = 4, so the expression
is undefined.
In field theory, the expression is only shorthand for the formal expression ab−1, where b−1 is the multiplicative inverse of b. Since the field axioms only guarantee the existence of such inverses for nonzero elements, this expression has no meaning when b is zero. Modern texts, that define fields as a special type of ring, include the axiom 0 ≠ 1 for fields (or its equivalent) so that the zero ring is excluded from being a field. In the zero ring, division by zero is possible, which shows that the other field axioms are not sufficient to exclude division by zero in a field.
Computer arithmetic
Floating-point arithmetic
In computing, most numerical calculations are done with floating-point arithmetic, which since the 1980s has been standardized by the IEEE 754 specification. In IEEE floating-point arithmetic, numbers are represented using a sign (positive or negative), a fixed-precision significand and an integer exponent. Numbers whose exponent is too large to represent instead "overflow" to positive or negative infinity (+∞ or −∞), while numbers whose exponent is too small to represent instead "underflow" to positive or negative zero (+0 or −0). A NaN (not a number) value represents undefined results.
In IEEE arithmetic, division of 0/0 or ∞/∞ results in NaN, but otherwise division always produces a well-defined result. Dividing any non-zero number by positive zero (+0) results in an infinity of the same sign as the dividend. Dividing any non-zero number by negative zero (−0) results in an infinity of the opposite sign as the dividend. This definition preserves the sign of the result in case of arithmetic underflow.
For example, using single-precision IEEE arithmetic, if x = −2−149, then x/2 underflows to −0, and dividing 1 by this result produces 1/(x/2) = −∞. The exact result −2150 is too large to represent as a single-precision number, so an infinity of the same sign is used instead to indicate overflow.
Integer arithmetic
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlkxTDFSSk9EWmZRMkZzWTNWc1lYUnZjbDlFYVhaQ2VWcGxjbTh1YW5Cbkx6SXlNSEI0TFZSSk9EWmZRMkZzWTNWc1lYUnZjbDlFYVhaQ2VWcGxjbTh1YW5Cbi5qcGc=.jpg)
Integer division by zero is usually handled differently from floating point since there is no integer representation for the result. CPUs differ in behavior: for instance x86 processors trigger a hardware exception, while PowerPC processors silently generate an incorrect result for the division and continue, and ARM processors can either cause a hardware exception or return zero. Because of this inconsistency between platforms, the C and C++ programming languages consider the result of dividing by zero undefined behavior. In typical higher-level programming languages, such as Python, an exception is raised for attempted division by zero, which can be handled in another part of the program.
In proof assistants
Many proof assistants, such as Coq and Lean, define 1/0 = 0. This is due to the requirement that all functions are total. Such a definition does not create contradictions, as further manipulations (such as cancelling out) still require that the divisor is non-zero.
Historical accidents
- On 21 September 1997, a division by zero error in the "Remote Data Base Manager" aboard USS Yorktown (CG-48) brought down all the machines on the network, causing the ship's propulsion system to fail.
See also
- Zero divisor
- Zero to the power of zero
- L'Hôpital's rule
Notes
- Cheng 2023, pp. 75–83.
- Zazkis & Liljedahl 2009, p. 52–53.
- Zazkis & Liljedahl 2009, p. 55–56.
- Kochenburger, Ralph J.; Turcio, Carolyn J. (1974), Computers in Modern Society, Santa Barbara: Hamilton,
Some other operations, including division, can also be performed by the desk calculator (but don't try to divide by zero; the calculator never will stop trying to divide until stopped manually).
For a video demonstration, see: What happens when you divide by zero on a mechanical calculator?, 7 Mar 2021, retrieved 2024-01-06 – via YouTube - Zazkis & Liljedahl 2009, pp. 53–54, give an example of a king's heirs equally dividing their inheritance of 12 diamonds, and ask what would happen in the case that all of the heirs died before the king's will could be executed.
- In China, Taiwan, and Japan, school textbooks typically distinguish between the ratio
and the value of the ratio
By contrast in the USA textbooks typically treat them as two notations for the same thing. Lo, Jane-Jane; Watanabe, Tad; Cai, Jinfa (2004), "Developing Ratio Concepts: An Asian Perspective", Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 9 (7): 362–367, doi:10.5951/MTMS.9.7.0362, JSTOR 41181943
- Cengiz, Nesrin; Rathouz, Margaret (2018), "Making Sense of Equivalent Ratios", Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 24 (3): 148–155, doi:10.5951/mathteacmiddscho.24.3.0148, JSTOR 10.5951/mathteacmiddscho.24.3.0148, S2CID 188092067
- Clark, Matthew R.; Berenson, Sarah B.; Cavey, Laurie O. (2003), "A comparison of ratios and fractions and their roles as tools in proportional reasoning", The Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 22 (3): 297–317, doi:10.1016/S0732-3123(03)00023-3
- Cheng, Ivan (2010), "Fractions: A New Slant on Slope", Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 16 (1): 34–41, doi:10.5951/MTMS.16.1.0034, JSTOR 41183440
- Cavey, Laurie O.; Mahavier, W. Ted (2010), "Seeing the potential in students' questions", The Mathematics Teacher, 104 (2): 133–137, doi:10.5951/MT.104.2.0133, JSTOR 20876802
- Wegman, Edward J.; Said, Yasmin H. (2010), "Natural homogeneous coordinates", Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Computational Statistics, 2 (6): 678–685, doi:10.1002/wics.122, S2CID 121947341
- Robinson, K. M.; LeFevre, J. A. (2012), "The inverse relation between multiplication and division: Concepts, procedures, and a cognitive framework", Educational Studies in Mathematics, 79 (3): 409–428, doi:10.1007/s10649-011-9330-5, JSTOR 41413121
- Cheng 2023, p. 78; Zazkis & Liljedahl 2009, p. 55
- Zazkis & Liljedahl 2009, p. 55.
- Cheng 2023, pp. 82–83.
- Bunch 1982, p. 14
- Kaplan, Robert (1999), The Nothing That Is: A Natural History of Zero, New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 68–75, ISBN 978-0-19-514237-2
- Bunch 1982, p. 15
- Roy, Rahul (Jan 2003), "Babylonian Pythagoras' Theorem, the Early History of Zero and a Polemic on the Study of the History of Science", Resonance, 8 (1): 30–40, doi:10.1007/BF02834448
- Cajori, Florian (1929), "Absurdities due to division by zero: An historical note", The Mathematics Teacher, 22 (6): 366–368, doi:10.5951/MT.22.6.0366, JSTOR 27951153.
- Herman, Edwin; Strang, Gilbert; et al. (2023), "2.2 The Limit of a Function", Calculus, vol. 1, Houston: OpenStax, p. 454, ISBN 978-1-947172-13-5, OCLC 1022848630
- Klein 1925, p. 63
- Klein 1925, p. 26
- Schumacher 1996, p. 149
- Hamilton 1982, p. 19
- Henkin et al. 2012, p. 292
- Keisler, H. Jerome (2023) [1986], Elementary Calculus: An Infinitesimal Approach, Prindle, Weber & Schmidt, pp. 29–30
- Conway, John H. (2000) [1976], On Numbers and Games (2nd ed.), CRC Press, p. 20, ISBN 9781568811277
- Gbur, Greg (2011), Mathematical Methods for Optical Physics and Engineering, Cambridge University Press, pp. 88–93, Bibcode:2011mmop.book.....G, ISBN 978-0-521-51610-5
- Carlström, Jesper (2004), "Wheels: On Division by Zero", Mathematical Structures in Computer Science, 14 (1): 143–184, doi:10.1017/S0960129503004110 (inactive 1 Nov 2024)
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link) - Cody, W. J. (Mar 1981), "Analysis of Proposals for the Floating-Point Standard", Computer, 14 (3): 65, doi:10.1109/C-M.1981.220379, S2CID 9923085,
With appropriate care to be certain that the algebraic signs are not determined by rounding error, the affine mode preserves order relations while fixing up overflow. Thus, for example, the reciprocal of a negative number which underflows is still negative.
- "Divide instructions", ARMv7-M Architecture Reference Manual (Version D ed.), Arm Limited, 2010, retrieved 2024-06-12
- Wang, Xi; Chen, Haogang; Cheung, Alvin; Jia, Zhihao; Zeldovich, Nickolai; Kaashoek, M. Frans, "Undefined behavior: what happened to my code?", APSYS '12: Proceedings of the Asia-Pacific Workshop on Systems, APSYS '12, Seoul, 23–24 July 2012, New York: Association for Computing Machinery, doi:10.1145/2349896.2349905, hdl:1721.1/86949, ISBN 978-1-4503-1669-9
{{cite conference}}
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ZeroDivisionError
", retrieved 2024-01-22 - Tanter, Éric; Tabareau, Nicolas (2015), "Gradual certified programming in coq", DLS 2015: Proceedings of the 11th Symposium on Dynamic Languages, Association for Computing Machinery, arXiv:1506.04205, doi:10.1145/2816707.2816710,
The standard division function on natural numbers in Coq, div, is total and pure, but incorrect: when the divisor is 0, the result is 0.
{{cite conference}}
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- Stutz, Michael (24 Jul 1998), "Sunk by Windows NT", Wired News, archived from the original on 1999-04-29
- William Kahan (14 Oct 2011), Desperately Needed Remedies for the Undebuggability of Large Floating-Point Computations in Science and Engineering (PDF)
Sources
- Bunch, Bryan (1982), Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, ISBN 0-442-24905-5 (Dover reprint 1997)
- Cheng, Eugenia (2023), Is Math(s) Real? How Simple Questions Lead Us to Mathematics' Deepest Truths, Basic Books, ISBN 978-1-541-60182-6
- Klein, Felix (1925), Elementary Mathematics from an Advanced Standpoint / Arithmetic, Algebra, Analysis, translated by Hedrick, E. R.; Noble, C. A. (3rd ed.), Dover
- Hamilton, A. G. (1982), Numbers, Sets, and Axioms, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521287616
- Henkin, Leon; Smith, Norman; Varineau, Verne J.; Walsh, Michael J. (2012), Retracing Elementary Mathematics, Literary Licensing LLC, ISBN 978-1258291488
- Schumacher, Carol (1996), Chapter Zero : Fundamental Notions of Abstract Mathematics, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 978-0-201-82653-1
- Zazkis, Rina; Liljedahl, Peter (2009), "Stories that explain", Teaching Mathematics as Storytelling, Sense Publishers, pp. 51–65, doi:10.1163/9789087907358_008, ISBN 978-90-8790-734-1
Further reading
- Northrop, Eugene P. (1944), Riddles in Mathematics: A Book of Paradoxes, New York: D. Van Nostrand, Ch. 5 "Thou Shalt Not Divide By Zero", pp. 77–96
- Seife, Charles (2000), Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea, New York: Penguin, ISBN 0-14-029647-6
- Suppes, Patrick (1957), Introduction to Logic, Princeton: D. Van Nostrand, §8.5 "The Problem of Division by Zero" and §8.7 "Five Approaches to Division by Zero" (Dover reprint, 1999)
- Tarski, Alfred (1941), Introduction to Logic and to the Methodology of Deductive Sciences, Oxford University Press, §53 "Definitions whose definiendum contains the identity sign"
In mathematics division by zero division where the divisor denominator is zero is a unique and problematic special case Using fraction notation the general example can be written as a0 displaystyle tfrac a 0 where a displaystyle a is the dividend numerator The reciprocal function y 1 x As x approaches zero from the right y tends to positive infinity As x approaches zero from the left y tends to negative infinity The usual definition of the quotient in elementary arithmetic is the number which yields the dividend when multiplied by the divisor That is c ab displaystyle c tfrac a b is equivalent to c b a displaystyle c cdot b a By this definition the quotient q a0 displaystyle q tfrac a 0 is nonsensical as the product q 0 displaystyle q cdot 0 is always 0 displaystyle 0 rather than some other number a displaystyle a Following the ordinary rules of elementary algebra while allowing division by zero can create a mathematical fallacy a subtle mistake leading to absurd results To prevent this the arithmetic of real numbers and more general numerical structures called fields leaves division by zero undefined and situations where division by zero might occur must be treated with care Since any number multiplied by zero is zero the expression 00 displaystyle tfrac 0 0 is also undefined Calculus studies the behavior of functions in the limit as their input tends to some value When a real function can be expressed as a fraction whose denominator tends to zero the output of the function becomes arbitrarily large and is said to tend to infinity a type of mathematical singularity For example the reciprocal function f x 1x displaystyle f x tfrac 1 x tends to infinity as x displaystyle x tends to 0 displaystyle 0 When both the numerator and the denominator tend to zero at the same input the expression is said to take an indeterminate form as the resulting limit depends on the specific functions forming the fraction and cannot be determined from their separate limits As an alternative to the common convention of working with fields such as the real numbers and leaving division by zero undefined it is possible to define the result of division by zero in other ways resulting in different number systems For example the quotient a0 displaystyle tfrac a 0 can be defined to equal zero it can be defined to equal a new explicit point at infinity sometimes denoted by the infinity symbol displaystyle infty or it can be defined to result in signed infinity with positive or negative sign depending on the sign of the dividend In these number systems division by zero is no longer a special exception per se but the point or points at infinity involve their own new types of exceptional behavior In computing an error may result from an attempt to divide by zero Depending on the context and the type of number involved dividing by zero may evaluate to positive or negative infinity return a special not a number value or crash the program among other possibilities Elementary arithmeticThe meaning of division The division N D Q displaystyle N D Q can be conceptually interpreted in several ways In quotitive division the dividend N displaystyle N is imagined to be split up into parts of size D displaystyle D the divisor and the quotient Q displaystyle Q is the number of resulting parts For example imagine ten slices of bread are to be made into sandwiches each requiring two slices of bread A total of five sandwiches can be made 102 5 displaystyle tfrac 10 2 5 Now imagine instead that zero slices of bread are required per sandwich perhaps a lettuce wrap Arbitrarily many such sandwiches can be made from ten slices of bread as the bread is irrelevant The quotitive concept of division lends itself to calculation by repeated subtraction dividing entails counting how many times the divisor can be subtracted before the dividend runs out Because no finite number of subtractions of zero will ever exhaust a non zero dividend calculating division by zero in this way never terminates Such an interminable division by zero algorithm is physically exhibited by some mechanical calculators In partitive division the dividend N displaystyle N is imagined to be split into D displaystyle D parts and the quotient Q displaystyle Q is the resulting size of each part For example imagine ten cookies are to be divided among two friends Each friend will receive five cookies 102 5 displaystyle tfrac 10 2 5 Now imagine instead that the ten cookies are to be divided among zero friends How many cookies will each friend receive Since there are no friends this is an absurdity The slope of line in the plane is a ratio of vertical to horizontal coordinate differences For a vertical line this is 1 0 a kind of division by zero In another interpretation the quotient Q displaystyle Q represents the ratio N D displaystyle N D For example a cake recipe might call for ten cups of flour and two cups of sugar a ratio of 10 2 displaystyle 10 2 or proportionally 5 1 displaystyle 5 1 To scale this recipe to larger or smaller quantities of cake a ratio of flour to sugar proportional to 5 1 displaystyle 5 1 could be maintained for instance one cup of flour and one fifth cup of sugar or fifty cups of flour and ten cups of sugar Now imagine a sugar free cake recipe calls for ten cups of flour and zero cups of sugar The ratio 10 0 displaystyle 10 0 or proportionally 1 0 displaystyle 1 0 is perfectly sensible it just means that the cake has no sugar However the question How many parts flour for each part sugar still has no meaningful numerical answer A geometrical appearance of the division as ratio interpretation is the slope of a straight line in the Cartesian plane The slope is defined to be the rise change in vertical coordinate divided by the run change in horizontal coordinate along the line When this is written using the symmetrical ratio notation a horizontal line has slope 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 and a vertical line has slope 1 0 displaystyle 1 0 However if the slope is taken to be a single real number then a horizontal line has slope 01 0 displaystyle tfrac 0 1 0 while a vertical line has an undefined slope since in real number arithmetic the quotient 10 displaystyle tfrac 1 0 is undefined The real valued slope yx displaystyle tfrac y x of a line through the origin is the vertical coordinate of the intersection between the line and a vertical line at horizontal coordinate 1 displaystyle 1 dashed black in the figure The vertical red and dashed black lines are parallel so they have no intersection in the plane Sometimes they are said to intersect at a point at infinity and the ratio 1 0 displaystyle 1 0 is represented by a new number displaystyle infty see Projectively extended real line below Vertical lines are sometimes said to have an infinitely steep slope Inverse of multiplication Division is the inverse of multiplication meaning that multiplying and then dividing by the same non zero quantity or vice versa leaves an original quantity unchanged for example 5 3 3 displaystyle 5 times 3 3 5 3 3 5 displaystyle 5 3 times 3 5 Thus a division problem such as 63 displaystyle tfrac 6 3 can be solved by rewriting it as an equivalent equation involving multiplication 3 6 displaystyle times 3 6 where displaystyle represents the same unknown quantity and then finding the value for which the statement is true in this case the unknown quantity is 2 displaystyle 2 because 2 3 6 displaystyle 2 times 3 6 so therefore 63 2 displaystyle tfrac 6 3 2 An analogous problem involving division by zero 60 displaystyle tfrac 6 0 requires determining an unknown quantity satisfying 0 6 displaystyle times 0 6 However any number multiplied by zero is zero rather than six so there exists no number which can substitute for displaystyle to make a true statement When the problem is changed to 00 displaystyle tfrac 0 0 the equivalent multiplicative statement is 0 0 displaystyle times 0 0 in this case any value can be substituted for the unknown quantity to yield a true statement so there is no single number which can be assigned as the quotient 00 displaystyle tfrac 0 0 Because of these difficulties quotients where the divisor is zero are traditionally taken to be undefined and division by zero is not allowed Fallacies A compelling reason for not allowing division by zero is that allowing it leads to fallacies When working with numbers it is easy to identify an illegal division by zero For example From 0 1 0 displaystyle 0 times 1 0 and 0 2 0 displaystyle 0 times 2 0 one gets 0 1 0 2 displaystyle 0 times 1 0 times 2 Cancelling 0 from both sides yields 1 2 displaystyle 1 2 a false statement The fallacy here arises from the assumption that it is legitimate to cancel 0 like any other number whereas in fact doing so is a form of division by 0 Using algebra it is possible to disguise a division by zero to obtain an invalid proof For example Let x 1 Multiply both sides by x to get x x2 displaystyle x x 2 Subtract 1 from each side to get x 1 x2 1 displaystyle x 1 x 2 1 The right side can be factored x 1 x 1 x 1 displaystyle x 1 x 1 x 1 Dividing both sides by x 1 yields 1 x 1 displaystyle 1 x 1 Substituting x 1 yields 1 2 displaystyle 1 2 This is essentially the same fallacious computation as the previous numerical version but the division by zero was obfuscated because we wrote 0 as x 1 Early attemptsThe Brahmasphuṭasiddhanta of Brahmagupta c 598 668 is the earliest text to treat zero as a number in its own right and to define operations involving zero According to Brahmagupta A positive or negative number when divided by zero is a fraction with the zero as denominator Zero divided by a negative or positive number is either zero or is expressed as a fraction with zero as numerator and the finite quantity as denominator Zero divided by zero is zero In 830 Mahavira unsuccessfully tried to correct the mistake Brahmagupta made in his book Ganita Sara Samgraha A number remains unchanged when divided by zero Bhaskara II s Lilavati 12th century proposed that division by zero results in an infinite quantity A quantity divided by zero becomes a fraction the denominator of which is zero This fraction is termed an infinite quantity In this quantity consisting of that which has zero for its divisor there is no alteration though many may be inserted or extracted as no change takes place in the infinite and immutable God when worlds are created or destroyed though numerous orders of beings are absorbed or put forth Historically one of the earliest recorded references to the mathematical impossibility of assigning a value to a0 textstyle tfrac a 0 is contained in Anglo Irish philosopher George Berkeley s criticism of infinitesimal calculus in 1734 in The Analyst ghosts of departed quantities CalculusCalculus studies the behavior of functions using the concept of a limit the value to which a function s output tends as its input tends to some specific value The notation limx cf x L textstyle lim x to c f x L means that the value of the function f displaystyle f can be made arbitrarily close to L displaystyle L by choosing x displaystyle x sufficiently close to c displaystyle c In the case where the limit of the real function f displaystyle f increases without bound as x displaystyle x tends to c displaystyle c the function is not defined at x displaystyle x a type of mathematical singularity Instead the function is said to tend to infinity denoted limx cf x textstyle lim x to c f x infty and its graph has the line x c displaystyle x c as a vertical asymptote While such a function is not formally defined for x c displaystyle x c and the infinity symbol displaystyle infty in this case does not represent any specific real number such limits are informally said to equal infinity If the value of the function decreases without bound the function is said to tend to negative infinity displaystyle infty In some cases a function tends to two different values when x displaystyle x tends to c displaystyle c from above x c displaystyle x to c and below x c displaystyle x to c such a function has two distinct one sided limits A basic example of an infinite singularity is the reciprocal function f x 1 x displaystyle f x 1 x which tends to positive or negative infinity as x displaystyle x tends to 0 displaystyle 0 limx 0 1x limx 0 1x displaystyle lim x to 0 frac 1 x infty qquad lim x to 0 frac 1 x infty In most cases the limit of a quotient of functions is equal to the quotient of the limits of each function separately limx cf x g x limx cf x limx cg x displaystyle lim x to c frac f x g x frac displaystyle lim x to c f x displaystyle lim x to c g x However when a function is constructed by dividing two functions whose separate limits are both equal to 0 displaystyle 0 then the limit of the result cannot be determined from the separate limits so is said to take an indeterminate form informally written 00 displaystyle tfrac 0 0 Another indeterminate form displaystyle tfrac infty infty results from dividing two functions whose limits both tend to infinity Such a limit may equal any real value may tend to infinity or may not converge at all depending on the particular functions For example in limx 1x2 1x 1 displaystyle lim x to 1 dfrac x 2 1 x 1 the separate limits of the numerator and denominator are 0 displaystyle 0 so we have the indeterminate form 00 displaystyle tfrac 0 0 but simplifying the quotient first shows that the limit exists limx 1x2 1x 1 limx 1 x 1 x 1 x 1 limx 1 x 1 2 displaystyle lim x to 1 frac x 2 1 x 1 lim x to 1 frac x 1 x 1 x 1 lim x to 1 x 1 2 Alternative number systemsExtended real line The affinely extended real numbers are obtained from the real numbers R displaystyle mathbb R by adding two new numbers displaystyle infty and displaystyle infty read as positive infinity and negative infinity respectively and representing points at infinity With the addition of displaystyle pm infty the concept of a limit at infinity can be made to work like a finite limit When dealing with both positive and negative extended real numbers the expression 1 0 displaystyle 1 0 is usually left undefined However in contexts where only non negative values are considered it is often convenient to define 1 0 displaystyle 1 0 infty Projectively extended real line The set R displaystyle mathbb R cup infty is the projectively extended real line which is a one point compactification of the real line Here displaystyle infty means an unsigned infinity or point at infinity an infinite quantity that is neither positive nor negative This quantity satisfies displaystyle infty infty which is necessary in this context In this structure a0 displaystyle frac a 0 infty can be defined for nonzero a and a 0 displaystyle frac a infty 0 when a is not displaystyle infty It is the natural way to view the range of the tangent function and cotangent functions of trigonometry tan x approaches the single point at infinity as x approaches either p 2 or p 2 from either direction This definition leads to many interesting results However the resulting algebraic structure is not a field and should not be expected to behave like one For example displaystyle infty infty is undefined in this extension of the real line Riemann sphere The subject of complex analysis applies the concepts of calculus in the complex numbers Of major importance in this subject is the extended complex numbers C displaystyle mathbb C cup infty the set of complex numbers with a single additional number appended usually denoted by the infinity symbol displaystyle infty and representing a point at infinity which is defined to be contained in every exterior domain making those its topological neighborhoods This can intuitively be thought of as wrapping up the infinite edges of the complex plane and pinning them together at the single point displaystyle infty a one point compactification making the extended complex numbers topologically equivalent to a sphere This equivalence can be extended to a metrical equivalence by mapping each complex number to a point on the sphere via inverse stereographic projection with the resulting spherical distance applied as a new definition of distance between complex numbers and in general the geometry of the sphere can be studied using complex arithmetic and conversely complex arithmetic can be interpreted in terms of spherical geometry As a consequence the set of extended complex numbers is often called the Riemann sphere The set is usually denoted by the symbol for the complex numbers decorated by an asterisk overline tilde or circumflex for example C C displaystyle hat mathbb C mathbb C cup infty In the extended complex numbers for any nonzero complex number z displaystyle z ordinary complex arithmetic is extended by the additional rules z0 displaystyle tfrac z 0 infty z 0 displaystyle tfrac z infty 0 0 displaystyle infty 0 infty z displaystyle infty z infty z displaystyle infty cdot z infty However 00 displaystyle tfrac 0 0 displaystyle tfrac infty infty and 0 displaystyle 0 cdot infty are left undefined Higher mathematicsThe four basic operations addition subtraction multiplication and division as applied to whole numbers positive integers with some restrictions in elementary arithmetic are used as a framework to support the extension of the realm of numbers to which they apply For instance to make it possible to subtract any whole number from another the realm of numbers must be expanded to the entire set of integers in order to incorporate the negative integers Similarly to support division of any integer by any other the realm of numbers must expand to the rational numbers During this gradual expansion of the number system care is taken to ensure that the extended operations when applied to the older numbers do not produce different results Loosely speaking since division by zero has no meaning is undefined in the whole number setting this remains true as the setting expands to the real or even complex numbers As the realm of numbers to which these operations can be applied expands there are also changes in how the operations are viewed For instance in the realm of integers subtraction is no longer considered a basic operation since it can be replaced by addition of signed numbers Similarly when the realm of numbers expands to include the rational numbers division is replaced by multiplication by certain rational numbers In keeping with this change of viewpoint the question Why can t we divide by zero becomes Why can t a rational number have a zero denominator Answering this revised question precisely requires close examination of the definition of rational numbers In the modern approach to constructing the field of real numbers the rational numbers appear as an intermediate step in the development that is founded on set theory First the natural numbers including zero are established on an axiomatic basis such as Peano s axiom system and then this is expanded to the ring of integers The next step is to define the rational numbers keeping in mind that this must be done using only the sets and operations that have already been established namely addition multiplication and the integers Starting with the set of ordered pairs of integers a b with b 0 define a binary relation on this set by a b c d if and only if ad bc This relation is shown to be an equivalence relation and its equivalence classes are then defined to be the rational numbers It is in the formal proof that this relation is an equivalence relation that the requirement that the second coordinate is not zero is needed for verifying transitivity Although division by zero cannot be sensibly defined with real numbers and integers it is possible to consistently define it or similar operations in other mathematical structures Non standard analysis In the hyperreal numbers division by zero is still impossible but division by non zero infinitesimals is possible The same holds true in the surreal numbers Distribution theory In distribution theory one can extend the function 1x textstyle frac 1 x to a distribution on the whole space of real numbers in effect by using Cauchy principal values It does not however make sense to ask for a value of this distribution at x 0 a sophisticated answer refers to the singular support of the distribution Linear algebra In matrix algebra square or rectangular blocks of numbers are manipulated as though they were numbers themselves matrices can be added and multiplied and in some cases a version of division also exists Dividing by a matrix means more precisely multiplying by its inverse Not all matrices have inverses For example a matrix containing only zeros is not invertible One can define a pseudo division by setting a b ab in which b represents the pseudoinverse of b It can be proven that if b 1 exists then b b 1 If b equals 0 then b 0 Abstract algebra In abstract algebra the integers the rational numbers the real numbers and the complex numbers can be abstracted to more general algebraic structures such as a commutative ring which is a mathematical structure where addition subtraction and multiplication behave as they do in the more familiar number systems but division may not be defined Adjoining a multiplicative inverses to a commutative ring is called localization However the localization of every commutative ring at zero is the trivial ring where 0 1 displaystyle 0 1 so nontrivial commutative rings do not have inverses at zero and thus division by zero is undefined for nontrivial commutative rings Nevertheless any number system that forms a commutative ring can be extended to a structure called a wheel in which division by zero is always possible However the resulting mathematical structure is no longer a commutative ring as multiplication no longer distributes over addition Furthermore in a wheel division of an element by itself no longer results in the multiplicative identity element 1 displaystyle 1 and if the original system was an integral domain the multiplication in the wheel no longer results in a cancellative semigroup The concepts applied to standard arithmetic are similar to those in more general algebraic structures such as rings and fields In a field every nonzero element is invertible under multiplication as above division poses problems only when attempting to divide by zero This is likewise true in a skew field which for this reason is called a division ring However in other rings division by nonzero elements may also pose problems For example the ring Z 6Z of integers mod 6 The meaning of the expression 22 textstyle frac 2 2 should be the solution x of the equation 2x 2 displaystyle 2x 2 But in the ring Z 6Z 2 is a zero divisor This equation has two distinct solutions x 1 and x 4 so the expression 22 textstyle frac 2 2 is undefined In field theory the expression ab textstyle frac a b is only shorthand for the formal expression ab 1 where b 1 is the multiplicative inverse of b Since the field axioms only guarantee the existence of such inverses for nonzero elements this expression has no meaning when b is zero Modern texts that define fields as a special type of ring include the axiom 0 1 for fields or its equivalent so that the zero ring is excluded from being a field In the zero ring division by zero is possible which shows that the other field axioms are not sufficient to exclude division by zero in a field Computer arithmeticFloating point arithmetic In computing most numerical calculations are done with floating point arithmetic which since the 1980s has been standardized by the IEEE 754 specification In IEEE floating point arithmetic numbers are represented using a sign positive or negative a fixed precision significand and an integer exponent Numbers whose exponent is too large to represent instead overflow to positive or negative infinity or while numbers whose exponent is too small to represent instead underflow to positive or negative zero 0 or 0 A NaN not a number value represents undefined results In IEEE arithmetic division of 0 0 or results in NaN but otherwise division always produces a well defined result Dividing any non zero number by positive zero 0 results in an infinity of the same sign as the dividend Dividing any non zero number by negative zero 0 results in an infinity of the opposite sign as the dividend This definition preserves the sign of the result in case of arithmetic underflow For example using single precision IEEE arithmetic if x 2 149 then x 2 underflows to 0 and dividing 1 by this result produces 1 x 2 The exact result 2150 is too large to represent as a single precision number so an infinity of the same sign is used instead to indicate overflow Integer arithmetic Handheld calculators such as this TI 86 typically halt and display an error message after an attempt to divide by zero Integer division by zero is usually handled differently from floating point since there is no integer representation for the result CPUs differ in behavior for instance x86 processors trigger a hardware exception while PowerPC processors silently generate an incorrect result for the division and continue and ARM processors can either cause a hardware exception or return zero Because of this inconsistency between platforms the C and C programming languages consider the result of dividing by zero undefined behavior In typical higher level programming languages such as Python an exception is raised for attempted division by zero which can be handled in another part of the program In proof assistants Many proof assistants such as Coq and Lean define 1 0 0 This is due to the requirement that all functions are total Such a definition does not create contradictions as further manipulations such as cancelling out still require that the divisor is non zero Historical accidentsOn 21 September 1997 a division by zero error in the Remote Data Base Manager aboard USS Yorktown CG 48 brought down all the machines on the network causing the ship s propulsion system to fail See alsoZero divisor Zero to the power of zero L Hopital s ruleNotesCheng 2023 pp 75 83 Zazkis amp Liljedahl 2009 p 52 53 Zazkis amp Liljedahl 2009 p 55 56 Kochenburger Ralph J Turcio Carolyn J 1974 Computers in Modern Society Santa Barbara Hamilton Some other operations including division can also be performed by the desk calculator but don t try to divide by zero the calculator never will stop trying to divide until stopped manually For a video demonstration see What happens when you divide by zero on a mechanical calculator 7 Mar 2021 retrieved 2024 01 06 via YouTube Zazkis amp Liljedahl 2009 pp 53 54 give an example of a king s heirs equally dividing their inheritance of 12 diamonds and ask what would happen in the case that all of the heirs died before the king s will could be executed In China Taiwan and Japan school textbooks typically distinguish between the ratio N D displaystyle N D and the value of the ratio ND displaystyle tfrac N D By contrast in the USA textbooks typically treat them as two notations for the same thing Lo Jane Jane Watanabe Tad Cai Jinfa 2004 Developing Ratio Concepts An Asian Perspective Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 9 7 362 367 doi 10 5951 MTMS 9 7 0362 JSTOR 41181943 Cengiz Nesrin Rathouz Margaret 2018 Making Sense of Equivalent Ratios Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 24 3 148 155 doi 10 5951 mathteacmiddscho 24 3 0148 JSTOR 10 5951 mathteacmiddscho 24 3 0148 S2CID 188092067 Clark Matthew R Berenson Sarah B Cavey Laurie O 2003 A comparison of ratios and fractions and their roles as tools in proportional reasoning The Journal of Mathematical Behavior 22 3 297 317 doi 10 1016 S0732 3123 03 00023 3 Cheng Ivan 2010 Fractions A New Slant on Slope Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 16 1 34 41 doi 10 5951 MTMS 16 1 0034 JSTOR 41183440 Cavey Laurie O Mahavier W Ted 2010 Seeing the potential in students questions The Mathematics Teacher 104 2 133 137 doi 10 5951 MT 104 2 0133 JSTOR 20876802 Wegman Edward J Said Yasmin H 2010 Natural homogeneous coordinates Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Computational Statistics 2 6 678 685 doi 10 1002 wics 122 S2CID 121947341 Robinson K M LeFevre J A 2012 The inverse relation between multiplication and division Concepts procedures and a cognitive framework Educational Studies in Mathematics 79 3 409 428 doi 10 1007 s10649 011 9330 5 JSTOR 41413121 Cheng 2023 p 78 Zazkis amp Liljedahl 2009 p 55 Zazkis amp Liljedahl 2009 p 55 Cheng 2023 pp 82 83 Bunch 1982 p 14 Kaplan Robert 1999 The Nothing That Is A Natural History of Zero New York Oxford University Press pp 68 75 ISBN 978 0 19 514237 2 Bunch 1982 p 15 Roy Rahul Jan 2003 Babylonian Pythagoras Theorem the Early History of Zero and a Polemic on the Study of the History of Science Resonance 8 1 30 40 doi 10 1007 BF02834448 Cajori Florian 1929 Absurdities due to division by zero An historical note The Mathematics Teacher 22 6 366 368 doi 10 5951 MT 22 6 0366 JSTOR 27951153 Herman Edwin Strang Gilbert et al 2023 2 2 The Limit of a Function Calculus vol 1 Houston OpenStax p 454 ISBN 978 1 947172 13 5 OCLC 1022848630 Klein 1925 p 63 Klein 1925 p 26 Schumacher 1996 p 149 Hamilton 1982 p 19 Henkin et al 2012 p 292 Keisler H Jerome 2023 1986 Elementary Calculus An Infinitesimal Approach Prindle Weber amp Schmidt pp 29 30 Conway John H 2000 1976 On Numbers and Games 2nd ed CRC Press p 20 ISBN 9781568811277 Gbur Greg 2011 Mathematical Methods for Optical Physics and Engineering Cambridge University Press pp 88 93 Bibcode 2011mmop book G ISBN 978 0 521 51610 5 Carlstrom Jesper 2004 Wheels On Division by Zero Mathematical Structures in Computer Science 14 1 143 184 doi 10 1017 S0960129503004110 inactive 1 Nov 2024 a href wiki Template Citation title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of November 2024 link Cody W J Mar 1981 Analysis of Proposals for the Floating Point Standard Computer 14 3 65 doi 10 1109 C M 1981 220379 S2CID 9923085 With appropriate care to be certain that the algebraic signs are not determined by rounding error the affine mode preserves order relations while fixing up overflow Thus for example the reciprocal of a negative number which underflows is still negative Divide instructions ARMv7 M Architecture Reference Manual Version D ed Arm Limited 2010 retrieved 2024 06 12 Wang Xi Chen Haogang Cheung Alvin Jia Zhihao Zeldovich Nickolai Kaashoek M Frans Undefined behavior what happened to my code APSYS 12 Proceedings of the Asia Pacific Workshop on Systems APSYS 12 Seoul 23 24 July 2012 New York Association for Computing Machinery doi 10 1145 2349896 2349905 hdl 1721 1 86949 ISBN 978 1 4503 1669 9 a href wiki Template Cite conference title Template Cite conference cite conference a CS1 maint overridden setting link Built in Exceptions Python 3 Library Reference Python Software Foundation Concrete exceptions exception ZeroDivisionError retrieved 2024 01 22 Tanter Eric Tabareau Nicolas 2015 Gradual certified programming in coq DLS 2015 Proceedings of the 11th Symposium on Dynamic Languages Association for Computing Machinery arXiv 1506 04205 doi 10 1145 2816707 2816710 The standard division function on natural numbers in Coq div is total and pure but incorrect when the divisor is 0 the result is 0 a href wiki Template Cite conference title Template Cite conference cite conference a CS1 maint overridden setting link Buzzard Kevin 5 Jul 2020 Division by zero in type theory a FAQ Xena Project Blog retrieved 2024 01 21 Stutz Michael 24 Jul 1998 Sunk by Windows NT Wired News archived from the original on 1999 04 29 William Kahan 14 Oct 2011 Desperately Needed Remedies for the Undebuggability of Large Floating Point Computations in Science and Engineering PDF SourcesBunch Bryan 1982 Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes New York Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 0 442 24905 5 Dover reprint 1997 Cheng Eugenia 2023 Is Math s Real How Simple Questions Lead Us to Mathematics Deepest Truths Basic Books ISBN 978 1 541 60182 6 Klein Felix 1925 Elementary Mathematics from an Advanced Standpoint Arithmetic Algebra Analysis translated by Hedrick E R Noble C A 3rd ed Dover Hamilton A G 1982 Numbers Sets and Axioms Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521287616 Henkin Leon Smith Norman Varineau Verne J Walsh Michael J 2012 Retracing Elementary Mathematics Literary Licensing LLC ISBN 978 1258291488 Schumacher Carol 1996 Chapter Zero Fundamental Notions of Abstract Mathematics Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 201 82653 1 Zazkis Rina Liljedahl Peter 2009 Stories that explain Teaching Mathematics as Storytelling Sense Publishers pp 51 65 doi 10 1163 9789087907358 008 ISBN 978 90 8790 734 1Further readingNorthrop Eugene P 1944 Riddles in Mathematics A Book of Paradoxes New York D Van Nostrand Ch 5 Thou Shalt Not Divide By Zero pp 77 96 Seife Charles 2000 Zero The Biography of a Dangerous Idea New York Penguin ISBN 0 14 029647 6 Suppes Patrick 1957 Introduction to Logic Princeton D Van Nostrand 8 5 The Problem of Division by Zero and 8 7 Five Approaches to Division by Zero Dover reprint 1999 Tarski Alfred 1941 Introduction to Logic and to the Methodology of Deductive Sciences Oxford University Press 53 Definitions whose definiendum contains the identity sign