Computers currently use switches which can only be on or off. They use a NAND gate to form circuits. Newer advanced computers will use switches that can use three states and will need trinary code. The third state can be called "maybe" or "almost". Quantum computing is different and I can not explain that!
They use the binary code (1010101011001100)
A computer's binary code is made up of 0 and 1
Unfortunately, there is no such thing as "binary dater".
Computers cannot understand languages. They can only compute data. Because of that, we use binary code because that is pure data.
It is known as the binary code.
A Binary code is a way of representing text or computer processor instructions by the use of the binary number system's two-binary digits 0 and 1.So the purpose of binary code is to issue human readable code, changed to machine code (binary) that the computer understands and can execute the instructions.
It doesn't. The only language the computer understands is its own native machine code; binary language. We use that binary language to program the computer such that it can translate the high-level human languages that we can understand into the low-level languages that it can understand, and vice versa.
Computers transmit information in binary code (also called "Machine Code") and then the computer's Operating System takes that binary code information and displays it in the language that the operator has chosen for it to be displayed it. All computers, regardless of language or country, use the same machine code.
Computer don't have Morse code. They use something called Binary Code. It uses 1s and 0s for the letters whereas Morse code uses dots and dashes.
When you program a computer to do something then you use what is known as a higher level language. For the computer to run the program it must first convert your program into binary so the computer can do the work. That work is done by either sending an electrical signal or not sending an electrical signal through the computer. When the computer has finished running the program it then has to change the binary system it uses into the higher level language you use so you get the answer you want
No, digital signals are not the only signals that can use binary code, but they are the most common. Binary code is primarily associated with digital systems, where information is represented using two distinct states (0 and 1). However, binary representations can also be employed in other contexts, such as in certain types of analog signal processing or encoding schemes. Overall, while digital signals are the primary users of binary code, other applications may utilize binary representations as well.
Binary