Natural number are all the positive integers - the 'counting numbers':
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12, ...
A binary number is written using only two symbols (0 and 1) instead of the normal ten symbols (decimal numbers).
A binary 1 is one, 10 is two, 11 is three, ... 1010 is ten.
All binary numbers (without decimalpoint or fractions) are natural numbers - just written in another way than usual.
No. The set of binary numbers includes fractions which are written in binary form. For example, binary(0.1) = decimal(0.5) which is not a natural number.
because the natural number is infinite so there is no greatest natural number
Humans understand natural numbers (1,2,3,etc) , but computers only understand binary (0,1). Computers only understand either 0 as "off" and 1 as "on."
with hexidecimal you neednt use as many chartictors to represent a number. in binary 15 would be 01111 where as in hex it would be E resulting in much quicker coding times
100
The number 919167 in binary is 11100000011001111111
The number 225 in binary is 11100001
The number 4693 in binary is 1001001010101
The number 1 as a binary number is 1
There is no decimal number for the binary number 13 because 13 cannot be a binary number.
The number 14 in binary is 1110
Invalid binary number.