(PHP 8 >= 8.4.0)
BcMath\Number::div — Divides by an arbitrary precision number
   Divides $this by num.
  
numscalenull, the BcMath\Number::scale of the calculation result will be set automatically.
     
    Returns the result of division as a new BcMath\Number object.
   When the BcMath\Number::scale of the result object is automatically set,
   the BcMath\Number::scale of the dividend is used. However, in cases such
   as indivisible division, the BcMath\Number::scale of the result is expanded.
   Expansion is done only as needed, up to a maximum of +10.
  
   That is, if the BcMath\Number::scale of the dividend is 5,
   the BcMath\Number::scale of the result is between 5 and
   15.
  
   Even in indivisible calculations, the BcMath\Number::scale will not always be
   +10.
   A 0 at the end of the result is considered not to need expansion, so the
   BcMath\Number::scale is reduced by that amount.
   The BcMath\Number::scale will never be less than the
   BcMath\Number::scale before expansion.
   See also the code example.
  
This method throws a ValueError in the following cases:
num is string and not a well-formed BCMath numeric stringscale is outside the valid range
   This method throws a DivisionByZeroError exception if
   num is 0.
  
Beispiel #1 BcMath\Number::div() example when scale is not specified
<?php
$number = new BcMath\Number('0.002');
$ret1 = $number->div(new BcMath\Number('2.000'));
$ret2 = $number->div('-3');
$ret3 = $number->div(32);
var_dump($number, $ret1, $ret2, $ret3);
?>Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:
object(BcMath\Number)#1 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(5) "0.002"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(3)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#3 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(5) "0.001"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(3)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#2 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(16) "-0.0006666666666"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(13)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#4 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(9) "0.0000625"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(7)
}
Beispiel #2 BcMath\Number::div() example of explicitly specifying scale
<?php
$number = new BcMath\Number('0.002');
$ret1 = $number->div(new BcMath\Number('2.000'), 15);
$ret2 = $number->div('-3', 5);
$ret3 = $number->div(32, 2);
var_dump($number, $ret1, $ret2, $ret3);
?>Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:
object(BcMath\Number)#1 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(5) "0.002"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(3)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#3 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(17) "0.001000000000000"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(15)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#2 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(8) "-0.00066"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(5)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#4 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(4) "0.00"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(2)
}
Beispiel #3 BcMath\Number::div() example of expansioning BcMath\Number::scale of result object
<?php
var_dump(
    new BcMath\Number('0.001')->div('10001'),
    new BcMath\Number('0.001')->div('10001', 13),
    new BcMath\Number('0.001')->div('100000000000001'),
);
?>Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:
object(BcMath\Number)#2 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(13) "0.00000009999"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(11)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#3 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(15) "0.0000000999900"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(13)
}
object(BcMath\Number)#4 (2) {
  ["value"]=>
  string(5) "0.000"
  ["scale"]=>
  int(3)
}
