You will have to mention what base 1002 is in because it could be any base from 3 to 9.
To convert millimetres to centimetres you divide by 10.
10 kilometers = 10,000 meters
Yes, I can.
Multiply by 10.
To convert centimeters to meters, multiply by 0.01
Typically, the base is 10 unless indicated otherwise. A number written 10001 could be base 10 - or any other base. It's usually not necessary to indicate base 10, but you could write 1000110 If this were base 2, there should be a subscript 2: 100012 To be clear you may want to include the 10 810 = 10002 910 = 1003 1510 = F16
11111
10002
11012
Commonly numbers are base 10 already.
Multiply the base by square root of 10 to the 4th power then divide by 2! (factorial) times 10!
Convert the base 10 numeral to a numeral in the base indicated. 503 to base 5
The number represented in base 2 by the digits 111 is equal to the decimal number 7.
210 = 102 810 = 10002 1010 = 10102
109 base 10
Yes. There are two methods. Formally, to convert any number from any base to any other base, simply iteratively divide by that other base, using the rules of arithmetic of the first base, recording remainders in reverse order, until the quotient is zero. For instance, to convert 10111112 to 1378 start by dividing by 10002 and repeating... 10111112 divided by 10002 = 101112 remainder 1112 10112 divided by 10002 = 12 remainder 112 12 divided by 10002 = 02 remainder 12 The answer is 1 (12) 3 (112) 7 (1112) The second method depends on the fact that 2 and 8 are relative powers of each other, specifically that 8 is 2 to the third power. As a result, you can take the binary bits and group them into groups of three bits and convert them on sight. 10111112 can be rewritten as 12 0112 1112. This, however, is only a trick for a human being; a computer still needs to do the division, but you could use the trick for a computer with a look up table. We also use the trick when converting for hexadecimal, but we cannot use the trick for decimal, because the divisor is 10102, and not just one 1 followed by some number of zeros.
Assuming the original number is written in base 10, there is no need to convert this to base 10 as it is already there. The hexadecimal number represented as 601 in base 16 is represented in decimal as 1537.