1100
11/12:= 11 ÷ 12= 0.9167 in decimal
12 in binary would be 1100
To convert the decimal number 134 to binary, we can repeatedly divide by 2 and record the remainders. The binary representation of 134 is 10000110. In a 12-bit format, it is written as 00010000110, with leading zeros added to make it 12 bits long.
To write 9,461,000,000,000 in scientific notation, you first place the decimal point after the first non-zero digit, resulting in 9.461. Then, count the number of places the decimal point has moved to the left, which is 12. Therefore, the scientific notation for 9,461,000,000,000 is ( 9.461 \times 10^{12} ).
9: 1001 10: 1010 11: 1011 12: 1100 13: 1101 14: 1110 15: 1111 16: 10000
12
Conversion from Binary to Decimal is easy if you use this common method: Assign a decimal value to each place of the binary number starting with 1 at the right-hand digit. Double each decimal value going right to left <== for each remaining binary digit, 1's and 0's. Add up the decimal numbers that correspond to 1's in the binary number. 1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1 binary 128, 64, 32, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1 = 128+64+16+8+1 = 217 decimal
9 and 12 hundredths in decimal notation = 9.12
111111112 = 1000000002 - 12 = [in decimal] 28 - 1 = 64 - 1 = 63
12 thousandths = 0.12 in decimal
As a number, it means 16+8+1, or 25 in decimal
11/12:= 11 ÷ 12= 0.9167 in decimal
In BCD each digit of a decimal number is coded as a separate 4 bit binary number between 0 and 9.For example:Decimal 12 in BCD is shown as 0001 0010 (Binary 1 and Binary 2), in Binary it is 1100.
12 in binary would be 1100
To convert the decimal number 134 to binary, we can repeatedly divide by 2 and record the remainders. The binary representation of 134 is 10000110. In a 12-bit format, it is written as 00010000110, with leading zeros added to make it 12 bits long.
9: 1001 10: 1010 11: 1011 12: 1100 13: 1101 14: 1110 15: 1111 16: 10000
1100