I am working through a review problem asking to find the inverse of $4\bmod 9 $. Through examples I know that I first need to verify that the gcd is equal to 1 and write it as a linear combination of 4 and 9 to find the inverse. I can do this in just one step:
gcd(4,9)
9 = 2 * 4 + 1
1 = 9 - 2 * 4
This would suggest that the inverse is 1 if I am understanding this correctly. However, the solution manual doesn't show the work but says the LC should actually be
1 = 7 * 4 - 3 * 9
making the answer to the question 7.
Can anyone explain to me what is going on here and how to properly find the inverse? Thanks!
P.S. wish I could add tags for congruency, gcd, and inverse. I can't believe their isn't an inverse tag already :(
\modis an operator used in CS;x mod ymeans the (nonnegative) remainder when dividing $x$ by $y$; by contrast,\pmodis the name of an equivalence relation, which consists of the symbol $\equiv$ and the(mod y). Second: the names of operators and functions in mathematics follows the following convention: if they are one or two symbols long, then italics are prefered; if they are three or more symbols long, then roman typeface should be used. So $x\ mod\ y$ does not follow that convention; although it is probably better to use\mathrm{mod}than\mod; I did now – Arturo Magidin Dec 13 '10 at 16:42\modis one of my peeves that I raise whenever I proofread/review/referee papers. – Arturo Magidin Dec 13 '10 at 16:47\modcommand. It seems like it wants to be\pmodwithout the parentheses, and it just screws up the spacing something awful no matter what one does. An addendum for the convention I mentioned above: two letter operators that abbreviate longer words (such aswtfor "weight",ln,adfor "adjoint") are also usually typeset in roman. – Arturo Magidin Dec 13 '10 at 16:58ln,ad), others often are but sometimes aren't (likewt, ad-hoc abbreviations). (I note that the correct LaTeX for the binary mod operator is\bmod). – Arturo Magidin Dec 13 '10 at 18:29