It is DAB not that hard really 0001 1 0010 2 0011 3 0100 4 0101 5 0110 6 0111 7 1000 8 1001 9 1010 A 1011 B 1100 C 1101 D 1110 E 1111 F and there you go
26
It is decimal 35.
E2 in hex is 1110 0010 in binary
It is 0001 0110 0011.
0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101
300 = 256 + 32 + 8 + 4 = Binary 0000 0001 0010 1100
10mins. Military time is as follows: 0001 hrs is 1 minute. 0010 hrs is 10 minutes. 0100 hrs is an hour. 1000 hrs is 10 hrs. So, like, 2130 hrs would be 9:30pm civilian time.
1 = 0001 2 = 0010 3 = 0011 4 = 0100 5 = 0101 6 = 0110 7 = 0111 8 = 1000 9 = 1001
You have to reform your question to be an actual question before someone can answer it. A counter circuit's output depends on the previous state when it is 'clocked'. So the output might be something like 0010, when the previous output was 0100. Then the next one after 0010 could be 0001. Or it might count the other way, depending on how configured.
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The decimal number 10, represented in BCD is 0001 0000. If, instead, you mean that you have 10 in BCD and want to know what that means, that is equivalent to 0000 0010 and would be 2 in decimal.
I assume you mean BCD, Binary Coded Decimal. BCD uses 4 bits to represent one decimal number. The easiest way is to make a table, with decimal, BCD, Hex and straight binary. 1 0000 0001 1 0000 0001 2 0000 0010 2 0000 0010 3 0000 0011 3 0000 0011 ...Skip a bit.... 9 0000 1001 9 0000 1001 10 0001 0000 A 0000 1010 11 0001 0001 B 0000 1011 ...Skipping again.... 15 0001 0101 F 0000 1111 16 0001 0110 10 0001 0000 Get the idea? In the first one, 4 binary bits are matched with one decimal digit. In straight binary, the number scrolls on. Interestingly, this caused some problems, earning itself the name 'the 2.1K bug'. some systems, generally small systems like Eftpos terminals, wrote values in BCD binary, but read them as straight binary. So dates were written in BCD 10, but read back as (check the table) Ordinary binary 16. Hilarity ensued.
Write each hexadecimal digit straight into binary: 5 = 0101 4 = 0100 2 = 0010 So 0x542 = 0101 0100 0010 = 10101000010 (without the spaces). Hex digit to binary conversion: 0 = 0000, 1 = 0001, 2 = 0010, 3 = 0011 4 = 0100, 5 = 0101, 6 = 0110, 7 = 0111 8 = 1000, 9 = 1001, a = 1010, b = 1011 c = 1100, d = 1101, e = 1110, f = 1111
yes it is one millimetre is = to 0001 of a meter 1m=1000mi
16: 0000 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110 0111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
The military is based on the 24 hour clock. 0000 being 12:00am, and 23:59 being 11:59pm. So, 0010, would be 12:10am.