It is complex. You are not just storing the actual text in the document. There is much more, like the formatting, the settings for the document and information for the file type and many other things. Newer versions of Word tend to create documents which take up more space. If you had a very old version of Word and took a file from it, opened it in a new version word and saved it without making any changes to it, the file would take up a lot more space. That is because the newer versions have a lot more settings and features and other technical things in them. A file with the exact same text could be more than 10 times larger in a modern version than some of the early versions of Word.
A KB, also known as a Kilobyte, is a way of describing stroage for digitial electronics. A KB will probably be just enough to save you a Word document in Mircosoft Word, which is not alot at all.
kb means kilo bytes. A byte is 8 bits which is the number of units in a computer word. Kilo is a thousand, so 1 kb=1,000 bytes, or computer words. I think this will explain your question.
NOPE.Kb might be the smallest size of a fileYour computer memory is made out of GB and most games are made out of GBA pictures or a word document can be made out of KbKilobiteGigabite
File compressor such as winrar
KB refers to space, KB means Kilobyte.
KB = Kilo bytes which is equal to 1,000 bytes :)
It depends on the content. Probably about 75 KB, but like I said, it depends on the content.
kB
MB, KB and GB are all shortened names measuring the amount of memory or disk space that is used by a computer. KB stands for kilobyte, which is 1000 bytes. MB stands for megabyte, which is 1000 kilobytes. GB stands for gigabtye, which is 1000 megabytes. It should be noted that computer operating systems and computer hardware manufacturers measure these sizes differently. Since computers are built on binary operations, they specify sizes based on the power of two. For a computer, a kilobyte is 1024 bytes, a megabyte is 1024 kilobytes and a gigabyte is 1024 megabytes. So, if you purchase a 500 gigabyte hard drive (based on 1 kilobyte = 1000 bytes), the hard drive manufacturer will measure that as 500,000,000,000 bytes. When the computer recognizes the hard drive, it will tell you that the hard drive is 465.66 gigabytes (base on 1 kilobyte = 1024 bytes). It should be noted that although the standards bodies prefer to measure a "1024" kilobyte as a "kibibyte" and so forth, the terms "kibibyte", "mibibyte" and "gibibyte" are not commonly used.
1000 kb = 1 mb, 1000 mb = 1 gb. 514200 kb = 514.2 mb = 0.5 gb
you fuart
There 3072 KB in 3 MB. One megabyte is equal to 1024 kilobytes. Thus, 1024 * 3 = 3072.It's worth noting that there is a difference between "KB" and "kb". The acronym "kb" is short for kilobites, while KB is short for kilobytes. There are 8 bits in one byte. In computer science, these two terms are used to measure information.