The question contains the phrase "what else". This implies that you already know of something but want to know of others. However, you have not bothered to tell us what you already know. There is, therefore, no way for us to determine whether the answer we give is what you already know or if it is something else - as required.
Australia uses the Australian Dollar (AUD) consisting of 100 cents.
Because money uses decimal values.The stock market used to divide the price of a share into by half, fourth, eighth, sixteenth of a dollar (or pound, presumably). A fourth of a dollar is 25 cents, but an eighth is 12 and a half cents. Since we never make a purchase of a half of a cent, it was logical to use round cents.
Australia uses a decimal currency (100 cents = 1 Dollar). The dollar symbol is $. Note, one vertical bar, not two.
New South Wales uses the Australian dollar, the same as everywhere else in Australia.
Australia uses a decimal currency system which is based on the Australian dollar which in 2011 hovers at around the same price as the US dollar.
There are many countries (or regions) which use cents as their minor currency unit and many others which use pound as the major unit. There is no information provided as to which country the question is about and so it cannot be answered.
If I understand your question correctly Australia uses the Australian Dollar. It is the third most traded currency in the world.Australian notes are made by an Australian invented process, using a polymer. That technology is now being used in currencies around the world. The notes come in denominations of A$5, 10, 20,50 and 100 dollars.Australian coinage comes in A$2, A$1, fifty cents, twenty cents, ten cents, and five cent designs. The coinage is designed by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth's jeweller and produced by the Royal Australian Mint in Canberra, ACT, (Australian Capital Territory), the nation's capital.
one country that uses dollars and cents is Australia
Dollars and Cents
The euro uses € as its symbol, so to show cents, say 55 cents, you would write it like this: €0.55
Australia uses the Australian Dollar.
Yes, both curencies are substantially different from each other in both value and appearance. Australia uses the Australian Dollar (AUD) and the USA uses the US Dollar (USD). Both currencies have 100 cents to the Dollar and they are both traded on the world market. One Australian Dollar almost never equals one US Dollar, their respective values change on a minute by minute basis with respect to each other and with respect to other currencies.