A megabyte (MB) is equal to 1,000,000 bytes in the decimal system, which has six zeros. In the binary system, where 1 megabyte is defined as 1,024 kilobytes, it corresponds to 1,048,576 bytes, which also has six zeros if expressed as a whole number. Therefore, in both contexts, a megabyte typically has six zeros when expressed in bytes.
Only one: the second digit.
6,144 megabytes.
1 zero. As 1megabyte= 1,048,576 Bytes The root 'Mega-' does not go well here as mega means 10^6, so it is expected that it would have 6 zeros buy it does not.
Six zeros: 127,000,000
Six zeros... 376,000,000
2,000,000 - six zeros.
The number 20 million has six zeros. This is because a million is represented by six zeros (1,000,000), so when you have 20 million, you are essentially multiplying a million by 20, resulting in 20,000,000, which has six zeros.
1,000,000 SIX ZEROS
Six zeros.
Six zeros... 66,000,000
it has apparently six zeros