Don't know; don't have any friends
8 in octal, 16 in hexadecimal.
378 is not a valid octal number. Octal (base 8) uses digits 0-7.
octal is also called base 8
The number 234 in octal is expressed as 352.
Octal (base 8) uses the digits 0 - 7.
8
It is one that we are familiar with and because we have ten digits (fingers+thumbs). If humans had had eight digits and grew up counting in eights, we'd be using the octal system and wonder why anyone would want to use a system based on ten!
Don't know; don't have any friends
a digit from 0 to 7 in octal notation.
8 in octal, 16 in hexadecimal.
No - octal numbers use only the digits 0-7.
the octal numbering system is not used for dealing it was once used for computers but has been replaced with binary and hexadecimal because of its complexity and how it does not relate to binary at all hexadecimal and binary go together way better...
The Octal number system is a numeral system based on the number 8 (as opposed to 10). Interestingly, the cultures that have adopted this system count using the spaces between their fingers instead of the individual fingers themselves.
Base 16 numbering is called 'Hex' or 'Hexadecimal'. Base 8 numbering is called 'Octal'. Base 2 numbering is called 'Binary'.
378 is not a valid octal number. Octal (base 8) uses digits 0-7.
The radix refers to the base of a number system: the total number of possible digits. The decimal number system that we all use is base ten, as it has ten distinct digits (0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9). Commonly used bases in computing include binary, octal, and hexadecimal, which have two, eight, and sixteen digits, respectively.