ASCII
A decimal is a way of representing a number. There is no number after a number.A decimal is NOT a decimal point.
A decimal is simply way of representing a ratio.
A decimal is a form of representing a number. It has no area at all.
a dot placed after the figure representing units in a decimal fraction.
a dot placed after the figure representing units in a decimal fraction.
Answer - Each key on the keyboard is assigned a binary equivalent ( ANCII Standands ) when you hit a key on the keyboard the CPU translates it into binary, stores it and then translates it back to decimal to put the corresponding letter on the monitor. AnswerEach key on the keyboard is assigned a binary equivalent ( ANCII Standands ) when you hit a key on the keyboard the CPU translates it into binary, stores it and then translates it back to decimal to put the corresponding letter on the monitor.
A decimal sign on a keyboard would simply be a period.
A decimal is a way of representing a number. There is no number after a number.A decimal is NOT a decimal point.
A decimal is simply way of representing a ratio.
A decimal is a form of representing a number. It has no area at all.
a dot placed after the figure representing units in a decimal fraction.
a dot placed after the figure representing units in a decimal fraction.
A quotient. A decimal is simply one of many ways of representing a number.
They are numbers representing ten thousandths.
The decimal is a way of representing a number. The number in this case is 54 so the decimal equivalent is 54.
The shifted back-slash key (not the slash key), usually located above the Enter key, will produce a vertical bar with most computer fonts. On the keyboard this vertical bar is usually shown broken in the middle. This is how that character looks in this font: | In the standard ASCII character set, this character is ASCII code 124 (decimal), which is 7C (hexadecimal, or hex).
A single character standing for a number. In the decimal system (base 10) it always stands for a single numerical character: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 or 9. But that need not always be the case. For example, B is the hexadecimal digit representing 11.