A bit is one unit of data, a yes or no, an on or off.
8 bits is one byte.
1024 bytes is one kilobyte
1024 kilobytes is one megabyte
1024 megabytes is one gigabyte
1024 gigabytes is one terabyte
1024 terabytes is one petabyte
1024 petabytes is one exabyte
1024 exabytes is one zettabyte
1024 zettabytes is one yottabyte
(they have just perfected the terabyte for the computer)
bytes kilobytes megabytes and gigabytes that is in order
53 bytes
First of all, I am going to assume you mean MB and GB and not Mb and Gb. There are two answers to this, because drive manufacturers use powers of 10 and computer scientists use powers of 2. Using powers of 10: 1MB=1,000,000 Bytes and 1GB=1,000,000,000 Bytes 3,230,000,000 Bytes + 816,670,000 Bytes = 4,046,670,000 Bytes ~= 4.047 GB Using powers of 2: 1MB=1,048,576 Bytes and 1GB=1,073,741,824 Bytes 3,468,186,092 Bytes + 856,340,562 Bytes = 4,324,526,654 Bytes ~= 4.124 GB
That depends on the programming language, and on the specific data type. Java, for example, has integers of different sizes; for example, an int uses 4 bytes, and a long uses 8 bytes. It also has shorter integer data types. Java also has different types of floating point numbers; for example, a double uses 8 bytes, and a float uses 4 bytes. Java also has classes for arbitrary-precision math (classes BigInt and BigMath); in this case, the size in memory for a number will vary, depending on the number of digits.That depends on the programming language, and on the specific data type. Java, for example, has integers of different sizes; for example, an int uses 4 bytes, and a long uses 8 bytes. It also has shorter integer data types. Java also has different types of floating point numbers; for example, a double uses 8 bytes, and a float uses 4 bytes. Java also has classes for arbitrary-precision math (classes BigInt and BigMath); in this case, the size in memory for a number will vary, depending on the number of digits.That depends on the programming language, and on the specific data type. Java, for example, has integers of different sizes; for example, an int uses 4 bytes, and a long uses 8 bytes. It also has shorter integer data types. Java also has different types of floating point numbers; for example, a double uses 8 bytes, and a float uses 4 bytes. Java also has classes for arbitrary-precision math (classes BigInt and BigMath); in this case, the size in memory for a number will vary, depending on the number of digits.That depends on the programming language, and on the specific data type. Java, for example, has integers of different sizes; for example, an int uses 4 bytes, and a long uses 8 bytes. It also has shorter integer data types. Java also has different types of floating point numbers; for example, a double uses 8 bytes, and a float uses 4 bytes. Java also has classes for arbitrary-precision math (classes BigInt and BigMath); in this case, the size in memory for a number will vary, depending on the number of digits.
this is in order from samllest to biggest : Bit = 1bit Byte = 8bits Kilobyte (kB) = 1024 bytes or 10^3 Megabyte (MB) = 1048576 bytes or 10^6 Gigabyte (GB) = 1073741824 bytes or 10^9 Terabyte (TB) = 1099511627776 bytes or 10^12 Petabyte (PB) = 10^15 bytes Exabyte (EB) = 10^18 bytes Zettabyte (ZB) = 10^21 bytes yottabyte (YB) = 10^24 bytes (this is as far as i know)
847,263 bytes is 827.405273KB 1 kilobyte is equal to 1024 bytes. Bytes / 1024 (bytes in a kilobyte) = kilobytes 847,263 bytes / 1024 (bytes in a kilobyte) = 827.405273 kilobytes
Defined by Hardware Manufacturers: Kilo-Bytes = 1,000 bytes Mega-Bytes = 1,000,000 bytes Giga-Bytes = 1,000,000,000 bytes or 1,000 Kb's Windows Actual Figures: Kilo-Bytes = 1,024 bytes Mega-Bytes = 1,024,000 bytes Giga-Bytes = 1,024,000,000 bytes Therefore, a HDD marketed as 100 Gb's is really only 97.6 Gb's when speaking about how much information it can actually hold. Remember Binary Code- 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048 and so on. If it were true that a Kb was 1,000 bytes and not 1,024, binary code would have looked something like this 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100...... and this pattern has multiple issues, such as it does not allow for multiplying, only adding, and we lose almost all (if not all) manual variables.
NOthere are 1048576 MEGA bytes in a Tera bytes
bytes integers long integers short integers word double word strings
1073741824 bytes or 10243 bytes or 230 bytes
Bytes. (B = bytes. b = bits.)
1024 bytes