Modular Exponentiation Calculator

Compute (base^exp) mod m efficiently using fast exponentiation

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Modular exponentiation computes base^exp mod m — and this tool does it the right way, with the fast square-and-multiply algorithm, so even thousand-digit exponents resolve instantly. It is the workhorse behind RSA, Diffie-Hellman, and primality tests.

How it works

Naively computing base^exp first is impossible for large exponents — the number is too big to store. Instead, the modulus is applied after every step:

result = 1
b = base mod m
while exp > 0:
    if exp is odd:  result = (result × b) mod m
    b   = (b × b) mod m       # square
    exp = exp >> 1            # next bit

Because every intermediate value stays below , and the loop runs only about log2(exp) times, the answer is found extremely quickly regardless of how large the exponent is.

Example and tips

(7^256) mod 13 is computed in just 8 squaring steps and equals 9, even though 7^256 itself has 217 digits. A modulus of 1 always yields 0, since every integer is divisible by 1. Keep the exponent non-negative — negative powers would require a modular inverse, which is a different operation.

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