Daecon Posted June 16, 2005 Posted June 16, 2005 What would decimal fractions be like if we didn't count in Base 10? I'm guessing 1.5 in decimal would be equal to 1.8 in hexadecimal, but what about with numbers that have more than one digit after the decimal point? 0.125 decimal would be about 0.2 hex I think? Also, how do you say "five and a quater" in binary; 101.01?
the tree Posted June 16, 2005 Posted June 16, 2005 You don't have quarters in binary, because 4 is a lot bigger than 1. In fact, you don't really bother with fractions.
Klaynos Posted June 16, 2005 Posted June 16, 2005 You don't have quarters in binary, because 4 is a lot bigger than 1. In fact, you don't really bother with fractions. As I understood it binary bits represent the following: ... 16 8 4 2 1 . 1/2 1/4 1/8 1/16 ... so 00010.0100 Would be 2.25 Depending on the type of binary bit for example a 10 bit mantissa and 4 bit exponant in 2's comp designates which bits are before or after the decimal place, and the values which they take. I also belive it is possible to expland this system to hex although I can't really rember so it'd be something like: ...256 16 1 . 1/16 1/256...
the tree Posted June 16, 2005 Posted June 16, 2005 As I understood it binary bits represent the followingUrm, bits are things you use in computing. When your using binary merely as a base 2 number system, then the numbers only represent themselves, nothing else.
lurflurf Posted June 16, 2005 Posted June 16, 2005 See here http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Base.html 5.25 (base 10) is indeed 101.01 (base 2) The idea is to write x in base b use [math] x = \sum_{k = -\infty}^{n} a_n b^n [/math] where a(n) is an integer and 0<=a(n)<b and 1<b
Klaynos Posted June 16, 2005 Posted June 16, 2005 Urm, bits are things you use in computing. When your using binary merely as a base 2 number system, then the numbers only represent themselves, nothing else. It's because I've learnt it from a computing perspective, by bit I mean digit, an individule 0 or 1.
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