8 zero's.
Binary Numbers all a computer knows!
No, binary numbers don't consist of ones and twos, they are ones and zeros.
Binary
Fives and zeros
Keep adding on place values. Ones have 0 Zeros Tens 1 zero Hunderds 2 zeros thousands 3 zeros And so on and so on...... P.S. This is 1 trillion 1,000,000,000,000
Binary code, zeros and ones.
A group of 8 zeroes and ones is equivalent to a byte in Binary.
Binary Numbers all a computer knows!
Digital quantities are represented by binary numbers (ONES and ZEROS). The binary ONES and ZEROS make up a word or number that indicate a value. Each bit position represents a portion of the overall quantity.
That's a system that specifies how data is to be stored as ones and zeros in a computer.
Computers use binary numbers. This is ones and zeros.
It is known as the binary code.
They dont have to use zeros and ones. It can be anything that are oposite.
Ones and zeros?
you can write the ones and zeros on paper as 1 or 0you can write the ones and zeros on paper as a row of triangles and squaresyou can paint the ones and zeros on canvas as a row of small dots and large dotsyou can show the ones and zeros by placing a row of 2x4 boards horizontally or verticallyyou can indicate the ones and zeros by using a row of red and green colored flagsyou can indicate the ones and zeros with a row of electric lights that are on or offyou can record the ones and zeros magnetically as flux reversals or no flux reversalsyou can record the ones and zeros magnetically as clockwise or counterclockwise magnetizationetc.
If you mean 'why' rather than 'what' - it's because early computers were simply banks of switches which could either be on (representing '1') - or off (representing '0'). Every character, letter or number in a computer's character set - can be represented in binary.
Yes, when it gets down to the basic data unit it's all about decoding and processing zeros and ones.