Billions are integers and so there will be no decimal points or digits after it.
10 digits are numbers in the billions.
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510582097
57
Used for what???The hexadecimal system is just a way to represent information. Each byte requires two hexadecimal digits. Modern computers have billions of bytes in RAM, and often a trillion or more bytes on the hard disk, so that would be billions or trillions of hexadecimal digits. Some examples of things that are often represented as hex digits: * An IPv6 address has 16 bytes - so, 32 hex digits. * A MAC address has 6 bytes (12 hex digits). * A register has a few bytes. The size varies, but is often 2-8 bytes.
Used for what???The hexadecimal system is just a way to represent information. Each byte requires two hexadecimal digits. Modern computers have billions of bytes in RAM, and often a trillion or more bytes on the hard disk, so that would be billions or trillions of hexadecimal digits. Some examples of things that are often represented as hex digits: * An IPv6 address has 16 bytes - so, 32 hex digits. * A MAC address has 6 bytes (12 hex digits). * A register has a few bytes. The size varies, but is often 2-8 bytes.
You can get billions of digits in several places, for example here: http://ja0hxv.calico.jp/pai/epivalue.html Not that it is a very useful pursuit...
Billions and Billions and Billions Billions and Billions and Billions Billions and Billions and Billions Billions and Billions and Billions Billions and Billions and Billions Yeah incase u don't get it HEAPS
Many, many, many, billions large. Ex. There are tens of billions of bugs outside!
The longest known value of pi is now into the hundreds of billions of digits.
57 or 75
Digits have ASCII kód '0'..'9' = 48..57