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/ Operator (Visual Basic)

Divides two numbers and returns a floating-point result.

expression1 / expression2

Parts

  • expression1
    Required. Any numeric expression.

  • expression2
    Required. Any numeric expression.

Supported Types

All numeric types, including the unsigned and floating-point types and Decimal.

Result

The result is the full quotient of expression1 divided by expression2, including any remainder.

The \ Operator (Visual Basic) returns the integer quotient, which drops the remainder.

Remarks

The data type of the result depends on the types of the operands. The following table shows how the data type of the result is determined.

Operand data types

Result data type

Both expressions are integral data types (SByte, Byte, Short, UShort, Integer, UInteger, Long, ULong)

Double

One expression is a Single data type and the other is not a Double

Single

One expression is a Decimal data type and the other is not a Single or a Double

Decimal

Either expression is a Double data type

Double

Before division is performed, any integral numeric expressions are widened to Double. If you assign the result to an integral data type, Visual Basic attempts to convert the result from Double to that type. This can throw an exception if the result does not fit in that type. In particular, see "Attempted Division by Zero" on this Help page.

If expression1 or expression2 evaluates to Nothing, it is treated as zero.

Attempted Division by Zero

If expression2 evaluates to zero, the / operator behaves differently for different operand data types. The following table shows the possible behaviors.

Operand data types

Behavior if expression2 is zero

Floating-point (Single or Double)

Returns infinity (PositiveInfinity or NegativeInfinity), or NaN (not a number) if expression1 is also zero

Decimal

Throws DivideByZeroException

Integral (signed or unsigned)

Attempted conversion back to integral type throws OverflowException because integral types cannot accept PositiveInfinity, NegativeInfinity, or NaN

Note

The / operator can be overloaded, which means that a class or structure can redefine its behavior when an operand has the type of that class or structure. If your code uses this operator on such a class or structure, be sure you understand its redefined behavior. For more information, see Operator Procedures (Visual Basic).

Example

This example uses the / operator to perform floating-point division. The result is the quotient of the two operands.

Dim resultValue As Double
resultValue = 10 / 4
resultValue = 10 / 3

The expressions in the preceding example return values of 2.5 and 3.333333. Note that the result is always floating-point (Double), even though both operands are integer constants.

See Also

Reference

/= Operator (Visual Basic)

\ Operator (Visual Basic)

Data Types of Operator Results (Visual Basic)

Arithmetic Operators (Visual Basic)

Operator Precedence in Visual Basic

Operators Listed by Functionality (Visual Basic)

Concepts

Arithmetic Operators in Visual Basic