I have next code
int a,b,c;
b=1;
c=36;
a=b%c;
What does \"%\" operator mean?
It is the modulo (or modulus) operator:
The modulus operator (%) computes the remainder after dividing its first operand by its second.
For example:
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
Console.WriteLine(5 % 2); // int
Console.WriteLine(-5 % 2); // int
Console.WriteLine(5.0 % 2.2); // double
Console.WriteLine(5.0m % 2.2m); // decimal
Console.WriteLine(-5.2 % 2.0); // double
}
}
Sample output:
1 -1 0.6 0.6 -1.2
Note that the result of the % operator is equal to x – (x / y) * y and that if y is zero, a DivideByZeroException is thrown.
If x and y are non-integer values x % y is computed as x – n * y, where n is the largest possible integer that is less than or equal to x / y (more details in the C# 4.0 Specification in section 7.8.3 Remainder operator).
For further details and examples you might want to have a look at the corresponding Wikipedia article:
Modulo operation (on Wikipedia)