25 cents.
$.04 is four cents.
Multiply the dollars by 100, then add the cents.
4/5 is actually 80/100 when it is re-written. 100 is the dollar and the 80 is cents. c/d.
The four binary units are bit (binary digit), nibble (4 bits), byte (8 bits), and word (usually 16, 32, or 64 bits depending on the computer architecture).
twenty-five cents; smilarly, "four bits" is fifty cents
2 bits equal 25 cents. So 6 bits would be 75 cents.
20 cents.
One nibble, or nybble, is equal to four bits.
80 cents
A bit is 1/8 of a dollar or 12.5 cents so if you have six bits it is 75¢
Four hundred fifty
It depends on what it is a bit of, as everything is relative, but the term usually refers to a small fractional unit. In time, a bit can be a few minutes from an hour, or an hour or two from a day. In American money, 25 cents is two bits, and 50 cents is four bits, meaning that a bit would be twelve and a half cents. The terms "two-bit" and "four-bit" are thus used in reference of other things to denote them as inconsequential. one bit is 12.5 cents.
4 quarters = 1 dollar = 100 cents
There are eight bits in a byte or two nibbles in a byte meaning there are four bits in a nibble.
This would be forty cents because it is the same as: $0.40. Four cents would be: $0.04.
If you are using the ASCII system, the word "duck", as it has four letters, contains 4 bytes, or 32 bits.