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Digital Literacy Computer Basics Computer Basics Binary

isnt this 00001000 equal to 4 because it is the 4th bit turned on?

binary

3 Answers

Steven Parker
Steven Parker
231,248 Points

Here's one way to decode binary numbers. Make a column for each digit, and starting from the right, put a "1" and then as you move left put double the value of the column next to it. Remember, right-to-left (:point_left: THIS WAY :point_left:). You'll get something like this, which is a horizontal version of the helper table shown in the quz:

128  64  32  16   8   4   2   1   <-- 8 columns for 8 digits

Then, put your binary number on the next line, spread into the columns. Now below that, multiply each top number by the binary digit and put the result below. It's easy, since binary digits are either 1 or 0, so you either put the number on top again or zero.

Then finally, add up all the numbers on the bottom row and that's your answer. Like this:

128  64  32  16   8   4   2   1   <-- starting columns
  0   0   0   0   0   1   1   1   <-- multiply by your binary digits
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
  0   0   0   0   0   4   2   1   <-- add these up:  4 + 2 + 1  =  7

Also, since zeros in front don't count you can skip them. So in this case we really only needed 3 columns.

So for you specific example. if you do the same thing you'll find the result is 8.

Jay Padzensky
Jay Padzensky
4,731 Points

Hi Natalie,

You're almost there. Unfortunately, it's not as straight forward as identifying which place in the number is "on". Recall:

00000001 is 1

00000010 is 2

00000011 is 3

00000100 is 4

00000101 is 5

Here's a link to help explain.

I understand now. Thank you I am so new to this.