Not in computing. A bit is a single entity. A nibble is four bits. A byte is eight bits.
signed: its value can be less than zero unsigned: its value cannot be less than zero example: 16 bit signed: -32768 .. 32767 16 bit unsigned: 0 .. 65535
You already said the answer that b is less than c
It refers to the go / no go boundry, a 5 mm sieve wont let anything larger than 5 mm through, but anything less will pass through.
its a bit bigger Al in gauge for similar losses so the bigger diameter Al also must be longer to get the required number of turns wrapped around the core (square cube law) so may need a bit more steel in the core to accommodate the larger volume Al costs less than copper Steel cost less than Al Cu doesnt oxidize as easily as Al
A 2-bit parallel full adder is a digital circuit that adds two 2-bit binary numbers along with a carry input, producing a 2-bit sum and a carry output. It consists of two full adder circuits, each handling one bit of the two numbers, along with a carry input from the previous less significant bit. The outputs include a 2-bit sum (S1, S0) and a carry-out (Cout) that indicates if there was an overflow. This design allows for efficient addition of binary numbers in parallel rather than sequentially.
A little bit. (Tiny bit)
Less than 4, around 3.8 liters
no they do not mean the same thing. less than 15 means that the anything less than 15 but not including 15. 15 or less means you include 15 and anything less than it.
Anything less than 3.
no it is not less than one gram;) is weighs a bit more
A sentence using anything less:You can take anything less than five.
Anything less than zero would be a negative number.
Yes. 0.3 is less than a third. 0.55 is a bit more than a half.
Yes
anything less than 90 degrees
There are no numbers that are more than 5 but less than 3. 3 is less than 5, so anything that is less than 3 is also less than 5.
No, it is not. Anything less than .31 (even .3099999) means it is less than .31. .13 is less than .31, and thus is not greater.