Base2 011 = 11 Base3 011 = 10 Any base above that: Base2(11) equals 3
The only two numbers that represent a binary digit are 0 and 1
010 011 111
Binary bits are necessary to represent 748 different numbers in the sense that binary bits are represented in digital wave form. Binary bits also have an exponent of one.
they can't
jibibygyyug
No.
0 and 1 are two integers. They may represent binary digits or binary data but they need not.
10110110 = 11 000 101 011 101 1012
yes
Convert each "digit" of the octal into a triplet of binary digits, according to the following rule: Octal Binary 0 000 1 001 2 010 3 011 4 100 5 101 6 110 7 111 So, for example, octal 53 = binary 101 011 [= decimal 43]
Binary code is a base 2 number system, with only the digits 0 and 1. It is used to represent the on/off states of transistors in integrated circuits, with 0 representing off and 1 representing on. So, binary codes represent the possible states of hardware transistors, and the binary codes represent numbers and letters through a coding system like ASCII or EBCDIC.