From left to right:
2 is in ten thousands position, 5 is in thousands position, 7 is in hundreds, 0 is in 10s position, 8 in units, 2 in tenths, 0 in hundredths, 1 is in thousandths
Because the value of each digit is 16 times the value of a unit in the digit to its right.
To represent an eight-digit decimal number in Binary-Coded Decimal (BCD), each decimal digit is encoded using 4 bits. Since there are 8 digits in the number, the total number of bits required is 8 digits × 4 bits/digit = 32 bits. Therefore, 32 bits are needed to represent an eight-digit decimal number in BCD.
The only two numbers that represent a binary digit are 0 and 1
Digit 4 represents ones.
Digit four represents ones.
Because the value of each digit is 16 times the value of a unit in the digit to its right.
These numbers are selections from the numbers from 100 to 999. That's 9 choices for the first digit. Each time, the second digit has 9 choices (0 to 9 excluding the hundreds digit), and then the last digit has 8 choices. Total is then 9x9x8 = 648
To represent an eight-digit decimal number in Binary-Coded Decimal (BCD), each decimal digit is encoded using 4 bits. Since there are 8 digits in the number, the total number of bits required is 8 digits × 4 bits/digit = 32 bits. Therefore, 32 bits are needed to represent an eight-digit decimal number in BCD.
The only two numbers that represent a binary digit are 0 and 1
It represent eighty thousand.
Digit 4 represents ones.
Digit four represents ones.
HTU. 100.0 The second digit to the left.
Metres
The digit 8 represents tenths.
The digit in a place value is the same as the digit in the place 1000 times greater if both places represent the same digit in a number. For example, in the number 5,678, the digit '5' in the thousands place is the same as the digit '5' in the 5,000s place. However, in most numbers, this will not hold true, as each place value typically has a different digit.
Forty