7
As per the 8421 rule the given binary number can be solved as : 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 1 i.e : 4+2+1 = 7 So the answer is 07 in decimal for 00000111 in binary
A remainder is the numbers after a decimal point; sometimes used as repesenting in binary to get a binary number from a decimal number.
4 + 2 + 1 ie 7
easy, 1011. in binary of course. convert 1011 binary to decimal you get 11.
A binary number should start with 1. So 00000111 is really just 111, which equals 7
The decimal number for 00000111 is 7. In binary form, each digit represents a power of 2, starting from the right with 2^0. So, from right to left, the binary digits 111 correspond to 2^0 + 2^1 + 2^2, which equals 7 in decimal form.
7
7
As per the 8421 rule the given binary number can be solved as : 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 2 1 i.e : 4+2+1 = 7 So the answer is 07 in decimal for 00000111 in binary
Binary numbers should start with 1 as 0 means that there is nothing in the column. So 00000111 is really just 111, which is the binary equivalent of the number 7
00000111 + 00001110 = 00010101
IF you are asking what that binary number is in decimal form... it would be 7. The question though seems to be asking waht that decimal number is in binary. You want to know what 111 is in binary? 1101111. Try using google. "111 in binary" as a search phrase gives you the answer.
To convert from binary to octal, bitwise AND the binary value with 0x8 (00000111 in binary) and push the value onto a stack. Right-shift (>>) the binary value by 3 bits and repeat until the binary value is zero. Pop the stack to build the left-to-right digits of the octal value. Using 10110100 as an example: 10110100 & 00000111 = 00000100 10110100 >> 3 = 00010110 00010110 & 00000111 = 00000110 00010110 >> 3 = 00000010 00000010 & 00000111 = 00000010 00000010 >> 3 = 00000000 Popping the values in order reveals 00000010, 00000110 and 00000100 (decimal 2, 6 and 4 respectively). Thus 10110100 binary is 0264 octal.
a) 6401 in Binary is 1100100000001b) 1010110 in decimal is 86
It is 127 in decimal numbers.
A remainder is the numbers after a decimal point; sometimes used as repesenting in binary to get a binary number from a decimal number.