Computer Fundamentals(Computer - Number System)
Computer - Number System
When we type some letters or words, the computer translates them in numbers as computers can understand only numbers.A computer can understand positional number system where there are only a few symbols called digits and these symbols represent different values depending on the position they occupy in the number.
A value of each digit in a number can be determined using
- The digit
- The position of the digit in the number
- The base of the number system (where base is defined as the total number of digits available in the number system).
Decimal Number System
The number system that we use in our day-to-day life is the decimal number system. Decimal number system has base 10 as it uses 10 digits from 0 to 9. In decimal number system, the successive positions to the left of the decimal point represent units, tens, hundreds, thousands and so on.Each position represents a specific power of the base (10). For example, the decimal number 1234 consists of the digit 4 in the units position, 3 in the tens position, 2 in the hundreds position, and 1 in the thousands position, and its value can be written as
(1x1000)+ (2x100)+ (3x10)+ (4xl)
(1x103)+ (2x102)+ (3x101)+ (4xl00)
1000 + 200 + 30 + 1
1234
As a computer programmer or an IT professional, you should understand the following number systems which are frequently used in computers.
S.N. | Number System & Description |
---|---|
1 | Binary Number System Base 2. Digits used: 0, 1 |
2 | Octal Number System Base 8. Digits used: 0 to 7 |
4 | Hexa Decimal Number System Base 16. Digits used: 0 to 9, Letters used: A- F |
Binary Number System
Characteristics- Uses two digits, 0 and 1.
- Also called base 2 number system
- Each position in a binary number represents a 0 power of the base (2). Example 20
- Last position in a binary number represents a x power of the base (2). Example 2x where x represents the last position - 1.
Example
Binary Number: 101012Calculating Decimal Equivalent:
Step | Binary Number | Decimal Number |
---|---|---|
Step 1 | 101012 | ((1 x 24) + (0 x 23) + (1 x 22) + (0 x 21) + (1 x 20))10 |
Step 2 | 101012 | (16 + 0 + 4 + 0 + 1)10 |
Step 3 | 101012 | 2110 |
Octal Number System
Characteristics- Uses eight digits, 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7.
- Also called base 8 number system
- Each position in a octal number represents a 0 power of the base (8). Example 80
- Last position in a octal number represents a x power of the base (8). Example 8x where x represents the last position - 1.
Example
Octal Number: 125708Calculating Decimal Equivalent:
Step | Octal Number | Decimal Number |
---|---|---|
Step 1 | 125708 | ((1 x 84) + (2 x 83) + (5 x 82) + (7 x 81) + (0 x 80))10 |
Step 2 | 125708 | (4096 + 1024 + 320 + 56 + 0)10 |
Step 3 | 125708 | 549610 |
Hexadecimal Number System
Characteristics- Uses 10 digits and 6 letters, 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E,F.
- Letters represents numbers starting from 10. A = 10. B = 11, C = 12, D = 13, E = 14, F = 15.
- Also called base 16 number system
- Each position in a hexadecimal number represents a 0 power of the base (16). Example 160
- Last position in a hexadecimal number represents a x power of the base (16). Example 16x where x represents the last position - 1.
Example
Hexadecimal Number: 19FDE16Calculating Decimal Equivalent:
Step | Binary Number | Decimal Number |
---|---|---|
Step 1 | 19FDE16 | ((1 x 164) + (9 x 163) + (F x 162) + (D x 161) + (E x 160))10 |
Step 2 | 19FDE16 | ((1 x 164) + (9 x 163) + (15 x 162) + (13 x 161) + (14 x 160))10 |
Step 3 | 19FDE16 | (65536+ 36864 + 3840 + 208 + 14)10 |
Step 4 | 19FDE16 | 10646210 |