The Romans had no numeral for zero. But later, during the middle ages, monks who still wrote in Latin and used Roman numerals introduced the symbol N (representing the Latin word Nullae) for zero.
no
Roman and Hebrew, probably among others.
The direct object of the verb 'use' is 'system'.
It uses the Binary Numbering System.
The main advantage of the Hindu-Arabic numeral system is that it contains a 0 figure hence making mathematical operations a lot simpler than the Roman numeral system which doesn'tcontain a 0 symbol
A number. 0- infinity.
Yes you can.
The binary system is numeric system with a base of 2, using only the numerals 0 and 1, or two gravitationally connected stars or other celestial objects which orbit around their centre of mass.
You cannot.First: 0 to 9 is not one digit but 10 digits.Second: You cannot change a numeric digit to a letter.You cannot.First: 0 to 9 is not one digit but 10 digits.Second: You cannot change a numeric digit to a letter.You cannot.First: 0 to 9 is not one digit but 10 digits.Second: You cannot change a numeric digit to a letter.You cannot.First: 0 to 9 is not one digit but 10 digits.Second: You cannot change a numeric digit to a letter.
Decimal
We typically use the Hindu numeric system (often called the Hindu-Arabic system in the west). This system can be applied to any base system (binary, octal, hexadecimal, etc) although we predominantly use the decimal (base 10) system in day to day usage.
No, it is not.