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{{Short description|Number expressed in the base-2 numeral system}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}
{{Table Numeral Systems}}
{{Table Numeral Systems}}
The '''binary numeral system''', or '''base-2 number system''', is a [[numeral system]] that represents numeric values using two symbols, usually [[0 (number)|0]] and [[1 (number)|1]]. More specifically, the usual [[Base (mathematics)|base]]-[[2 (number)|2]] system is a [[positional notation]] with a [[radix]] of 2. Owing to its straightforward implementation in [[electronic circuit]]ry, the binary system is used internally by virtually all modern [[computer]]s.
A '''binary number''' is a [[number]] expressed in the '''[[Radix|base]]-2 [[numeral system]]''' or '''binary numeral system''', a method for representing [[number]]s that uses only two symbols for the [[natural number]]s: typically "0" ([[zero]]) and "1" ([[one]]). A ''binary number'' may also refer to a [[rational number]] that has a finite representation in the binary numeral system, that is, the quotient of an [[integer]] by a power of two.


The base-2 numeral system is a [[positional notation]] with a [[radix]] of [[2]]. Each digit is referred to as [[bit]], or binary digit. Because of its straightforward implementation in [[digital electronic circuit]]ry using [[logic gate]]s, the binary system is used by almost all modern [[computer|computers and computer-based devices]], as a preferred system of use, over various other human techniques of communication, because of the simplicity of the language and the noise immunity in physical implementation.<ref>{{cite web |title=3.3. Binary and Its Advantages — CS160 Reader |url=https://computerscience.chemeketa.edu/cs160Reader/Binary/Binary.html |website=computerscience.chemeketa.edu |access-date=22 May 2024}}</ref>
== History ==
The ancient [[Indian mathematics|Indian mathematician]] [[Pingala]] presented the first known description of a binary numeral system around 800 [[Common Era|BC]].<ref>W. S. Anglin and J. Lambek, ''The Heritage of Thales'', Springer, 1995, ISBN 038794544X [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN038794544X&id=mZfXHRgJpmQC&pg=RA1-PA112&lpg=RA1-PA112&ots=dq2uhf5X1y&dq=pingala+binary+indian&sig=LTdSjpurM7CiwOZ6DJxYwvKh_eQ online]</ref>


==History==
A full set of 8 [[Bagua (concept)|trigram]]s and 64 [[Hexagram (I Ching)|hexagram]]s, analogous to the 3-bit and 6-bit binary numerals, were known to the ancient Chinese in the [[Chinese classic texts|classic text]] ''[[I Ching]]''. Similar sets of binary combinations have also been used in
The modern binary number system was studied in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries by [[Thomas Harriot]], [[Gottfried Leibniz]]. However, systems related to binary numbers have appeared earlier in multiple cultures including ancient Egypt, China, and India.
traditional African divination systems such as [[Ifá]] as well as in medieval Western [[geomancy]].


===Egypt===
An ordered binary arrangement of the hexagrams of the I Ching, representing the decimal sequence from 0 to 63, and a method for generating the same, was developed by the Chinese scholar and philosopher [[Shao Yong]] in the 11th century. However, there is no evidence that Shao understood binary computation.
{{See also|Ancient Egyptian mathematics}}
[[File:Oudjat.SVG|thumb|240px|left|Arithmetic values thought to have been represented by parts of the [[Eye of Horus]]]]
The scribes of ancient Egypt used two different systems for their fractions, [[Egyptian fraction]]s (not related to the binary number system) and [[Eye of Horus|Horus-Eye]] fractions (so called because many historians of mathematics believe that the symbols used for this system could be arranged to form the eye of [[Horus]], although this has been disputed).<ref>{{citation|title=The Oxford Handbook of the History of Mathematics|editor1-first=Eleanor|editor1-last=Robson|editor1-link=Eleanor Robson|editor2-first=Jacqueline|editor2-last=Stedall|editor2-link=Jackie Stedall|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2009|isbn=9780199213122|page=790|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xZMSDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA790|contribution=Myth No. 2: the Horus eye fractions}}</ref> Horus-Eye fractions are a binary numbering system for fractional quantities of grain, liquids, or other measures, in which a fraction of a [[hekat]] is expressed as a sum of the binary fractions 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, and 1/64. Early forms of this system can be found in documents from the [[Fifth Dynasty of Egypt]], approximately 2400 BC, and its fully developed hieroglyphic form dates to the [[Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt]], approximately 1200 BC.<ref>{{citation|title=Numerical Notation: A Comparative History|first=Stephen|last=Chrisomalis|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2010|isbn=9780521878180|pages=42–43|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ux--OWgWvBQC&pg=PA42}}.</ref>


The method used for [[ancient Egyptian multiplication]] is also closely related to binary numbers. In this method, multiplying one number by a second is performed by a sequence of steps in which a value (initially the first of the two numbers) is either doubled or has the first number added back into it; the order in which these steps are to be performed is given by the binary representation of the second number. This method can be seen in use, for instance, in the [[Rhind Mathematical Papyrus]], which dates to around 1650 BC.<ref>{{citation|title=How Mathematics Happened: The First 50,000 Years|first=Peter Strom|last=Rudman|publisher=Prometheus Books|year=2007|isbn=9781615921768|pages=135–136|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BtcQq4RUfkUC&pg=PA135}}.</ref>
In 1605 [[Francis Bacon]] discussed a system by which letters of the alphabet could be reduced to sequences of binary digits, which could then be encoded as scarcely visible variations in the font in any random text. Importantly for the general theory of binary encoding, he added that this method could used with any objects at all: "provided those objects be capable of a twofold difference onely; as by Bells, by Trumpets, by Lights and Torches, by the report of Muskets, and any instruments of like nature."<ref>Bacon, Francis ''The Advancement of Learning'', Book 6, Chapter 1, 1605. [http://home.hiwaay.net/~paul/bacon/advancement/book6ch1.html Online here.]</ref> (See [[Bacon's cipher]].)


===China===
The modern binary number system was fully documented by [[Gottfried Leibniz]] in the 17th century in his article ''[[Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire]]''. Leibniz's system used 0 and 1, like the modern binary numeral system.
[[File:Bagua-name-earlier.svg|thumb|160px|Daoist Bagua]]
The ''[[I Ching]]'' dates from the 9th century BC in China.<ref name="HackerMoore2002">{{cite book|author1=Edward Hacker|author2=Steve Moore|author3=Lorraine Patsco|title=I Ching: An Annotated Bibliography|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=S5hLpfFiMCQC&pg=PR13|year=2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-0-415-93969-0|page=13}}</ref> The binary notation in the ''I Ching'' is used to interpret its [[quaternary numeral system|quaternary]] [[I Ching divination|divination]] technique.<ref name=redmond-hon/>


It is based on taoistic duality of [[yin and yang]].<ref name="scientific">{{cite book|author1=Jonathan Shectman|title=Groundbreaking Scientific Experiments, Inventions, and Discoveries of the 18th Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SsbChdIiflsC&pg=PA29|year=2003|publisher=Greenwood Publishing|isbn=978-0-313-32015-6|page=29}}</ref> [[Ba gua|Eight trigrams (Bagua)]] and a set of [[Hexagram (I Ching)|64 hexagrams ("sixty-four" gua)]], analogous to the three-bit and six-bit binary numerals, were in use at least as early as the [[Zhou dynasty]] of ancient China.<ref name="HackerMoore2002"/>
In 1854, [[United Kingdom|British]] mathematician [[George Boole]] published a landmark paper detailing a system of [[logic]] that would become known as [[Boolean algebra]]. His logical system proved instrumental in the development of the binary system, particularly in its implementation in electronic circuitry.


The [[Song dynasty]] scholar [[Shao Yong]] (1011–1077) rearranged the hexagrams in a format that resembles modern binary numbers, although he did not intend his arrangement to be used mathematically.<ref name=redmond-hon>{{cite book|last1=Redmond|first1=Geoffrey|last2=Hon|first2=Tze-Ki|title=Teaching the I Ching|date=2014|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-976681-9|page=227}}</ref> Viewing the [[least significant bit]] on top of single hexagrams in Shao Yong's square<ref name="Marshall">
In 1937, [[Claude Shannon]] produced his master's thesis at [[MIT]] that implemented [[Boolean algebra]] and binary arithmetic using electronic relays and switches for the first time in history. Entitled ''[[A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits]]'', Shannon's thesis essentially founded practical [[digital circuit]] design.
{{cite web
|url= http://www.biroco.com/yijing/sequence.htm
|title= Yijing hexagram sequences: The Shao Yong square (Fuxi sequence)
|last= Marshall
|first= Steve
|date=
|website=
|publisher=
|access-date=2022-09-15
|quote="You could say [the Fuxi binary sequence] is a more sensible way of rendering hexagram as binary numbers ... The reasoning, if any, that informs [the King Wen] sequence is unknown."
}}
</ref>
and reading along rows either from bottom right to top left with solid lines as 0 and broken lines as 1 or from top left to bottom right with solid lines as 1 and broken lines as 0 hexagrams can be interpreted as sequence from 0 to 63.
<ref name="Shao Yong’s ”Xiantian Tu'‘">{{cite book|last1=Zhonglian|first1=Shi|last2=Wenzhao|first2=Li|last3=Poser|first3=Hans|title=Leibniz' Binary System and Shao Yong's "Xiantian Tu" in :Das Neueste über China: G.W. Leibnizens Novissima Sinica von 1697 : Internationales Symposium, Berlin 4. bis 7. Oktober 1997|date=2000|
publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|location=Stuttgart|isbn=3515074481|pages=165–170|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DkIpP2SsGlIC&pg=PA165|ref=ID3515074481}}</ref>


=== Classical antiquity ===
In November of 1937, [[George Stibitz]], then working at [[Bell Labs]], completed a relay-based computer he dubbed the "Model K" (for "'''K'''itchen", where he had assembled it), which calculated using binary addition. Bell Labs thus authorized a full research program in late 1938 with Stibitz at the helm. Their [[Complex Number Computer]], completed [[January 8]], [[1940]], was able to calculate [[complex numbers]]. In a demonstration to the [[American Mathematical Society]] conference at [[Dartmouth College]] on [[September 11]], [[1940]], Stibitz was able to send the Complex Number Calculator remote commands over telephone lines by a [[teletype]]. It was the first computing machine ever used remotely over a phone line. Some participants of the conference who witnessed the demonstration were [[John Von Neumann]], [[John Mauchly]], and [[Norbert Wiener]], who wrote about it in his memoirs.
[[Etruscan civilization|Etruscans]] divided the outer edge of [[Haruspex|divination livers]] into sixteen parts, each inscribed with the name of a divinity and its region of the sky. Each liver region produced a binary reading which was combined into a final binary for divination.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Collins |first=Derek |date=2008 |title=Mapping the Entrails: The Practice of Greek Hepatoscopy |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27566714 |journal=The American Journal of Philology |volume=129 |issue=3 |pages=319–345 |jstor=27566714 |issn=0002-9475}}</ref>


Divination at Ancient Greek [[Dodona]] oracle worked by drawing from separate jars, questions tablets and "yes" and "no" pellets. The result was then combined to make a final prophecy.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Johnston |first=Sarah Iles |title=Ancient Greek divination |date=2008 |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |isbn=978-1-4051-1573-5 |edition=1. publ |series=Blackwell ancient religions |location=Malden, Mass.}}</ref>
== Representation ==


===India===
A binary number can be represented by any sequence of [[bit]]s (binary digits), which in turn may be represented by any mechanism capable of being in two mutually exclusive states. The following sequences of symbols could all be interpreted as the same binary numeric value:
The Indian scholar [[Pingala]] (c. 2nd century BC) developed a binary system for describing [[prosody (poetry)|prosody]].<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Sanchez|first1=Julio|last2=Canton|first2=Maria P.|title=Microcontroller programming: the microchip PIC|year=2007|publisher=CRC Press|location=Boca Raton, Florida|isbn=978-0-8493-7189-9|page=37}}</ref><ref>W. S. Anglin and J. Lambek, ''The Heritage of Thales'', Springer, 1995, {{ISBN|0-387-94544-X}}</ref> He described meters in the form of short and long syllables (the latter equal in length to two short syllables).<ref>[http://www.sju.edu/~rhall/Rhythms/Poets/arcadia.pdf Math for Poets and Drummers] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120616225617/http://www.sju.edu/~rhall/Rhythms/Poets/arcadia.pdf |date=16 June 2012 }} (pdf, 145KB)</ref> They were known as ''laghu'' (light) and ''guru'' (heavy) syllables.


Pingala's Hindu classic titled [[Chandaḥśāstra]] (8.23) describes the formation of a matrix in order to give a unique value to each meter. "Chandaḥśāstra" literally translates to ''science of meters'' in Sanskrit. The binary representations in Pingala's system increases towards the right, and not to the left like in the binary numbers of the modern [[positional notation]].<ref>{{Cite book|title=The mathematics of harmony: from Euclid to contemporary mathematics and computer science|first1=Alexey|last1=Stakhov|author1-link=Alexey Stakhov|first2=Scott Anthony|last2=Olsen|isbn=978-981-277-582-5|year=2009|publisher=World Scientific |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K6fac9RxXREC}}</ref> In Pingala's system, the numbers start from number one, and not zero. Four short syllables "0000" is the first pattern and corresponds to the value one. The numerical value is obtained by adding one to the sum of [[place value]]s.<ref>B. van Nooten, "Binary Numbers in Indian Antiquity", Journal of Indian Studies, Volume 21, 1993, pp. 31–50</ref>
1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0
| - | - - | | - | -
x o x o o x x o x o
y n y n n y y n y n


=== Africa ===
[[Image:Binary clock.svg|250px|thumbnail|right|A [[binary clock]] might use [[Light-emitting diode|LEDs]] to express binary values. In this clock, each column of LEDs shows a [[binary-coded decimal]] numeral of the traditional [[sexagesimal]] time. ]]
The [[Ifá]] is an African divination system''.'' Similar to the ''I Ching'', but has up to 256 binary signs,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Landry |first=Timothy R. |title=Vodún: secrecy and the search for divine power |date=2019 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0-8122-5074-9 |edition=1st |series=Contemporary ethnography |location=Philadelphia |pages=25}}</ref> unlike the ''I Ching'' which has 64. The Ifá originated in 15th century West Africa among [[Yoruba people]]. In 2008, [[UNESCO]] added Ifá to its list of the "[[Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity]]".{{sfn|Landry|2019|p=154}}<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ifa Divination System |url=https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/ifa-divination-system-00146 |access-date=5 July 2017}}</ref>


===Other cultures===
The numeric value represented in each case is dependent upon the value assigned to each symbol. In a computer, the numeric values may be represented by two different [[voltage]]s; on a [[Magnetic field|magnetic]] [[disk]], magnetic [[polarity|polarities]] may be used. A "positive", "yes", or "on" state is not necessarily equivalent to the numerical value of one; it depends on the architecture in use.
The residents of the island of [[Mangareva]] in [[French Polynesia]] were using a hybrid binary-[[decimal]] system before 1450.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Bender|first1=Andrea|last2=Beller|first2=Sieghard|title=Mangarevan invention of binary steps for easier calculation|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume=111|issue=4|date=16 December 2013|doi=10.1073/pnas.1309160110|pages=1322–1327|pmid=24344278|pmc=3910603|doi-access=free}}</ref> [[Slit drum]]s with binary tones are used to encode messages across Africa and Asia.<ref name="scientific"/>
Sets of binary combinations similar to the ''I Ching'' have also been used in traditional African divination systems, such as [[Ifá]] among others, as well as in [[Middle Ages|medieval]] Western [[geomancy]]. The majority of [[Australian Aboriginal languages|Indigenous Australian languages]] use a base-2 system.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bowern |first1=Claire |last2=Zentz |first2=Jason |date=2012 |title=Diversity in the Numeral Systems of Australian Languages |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23621076 |journal=Anthropological Linguistics |volume=54 |issue=2 |pages=133–160 |jstor=23621076 |issn=0003-5483}}</ref>


===Western predecessors to Leibniz===
In keeping with customary representation of numerals using [[Arabic numerals]], binary numbers are commonly written using the symbols '''0''' and '''1'''. When written, binary numerals are often subscripted, prefixed or suffixed in order to indicate their base, or radix. The following notations are equivalent:
In the late 13th century [[Ramon Llull]] had the ambition to account for all wisdom in every branch of human knowledge of the time. For that purpose he developed a general method or "Ars generalis" based on binary combinations of a number of simple basic principles or categories, for which he has been considered a predecessor of computing science and artificial intelligence.<ref>(see Bonner 2007 [http://lullianarts.net/] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140403194204/http://lullianarts.net/|date=3 April 2014}}, Fidora et al. 2011 [https://www.iiia.csic.es/es/publications/ramon-llull-ars-magna-artificial-intelligence/] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190408011909/https://www.iiia.csic.es/es/publications/ramon-llull-ars-magna-artificial-intelligence/|date=8 April 2019}})</ref>


In 1605, [[Francis Bacon]] discussed a system whereby letters of the alphabet could be reduced to sequences of binary digits, which could then be encoded as scarcely visible variations in the font in any random text.<ref name="Bacon1605" /> Importantly for the general theory of binary encoding, he added that this method could be used with any objects at all: "provided those objects be capable of a twofold difference only; as by Bells, by Trumpets, by Lights and Torches, by the report of Muskets, and any instruments of like nature".<ref name="Bacon1605">{{Cite web
:100101 binary (explicit statement of format)
|last=Bacon
:100101b (a suffix indicating binary format)
|first=Francis
:100101B (a suffix indicating binary format)
|author-link=Francis Bacon
:bin 100101 (a prefix indicating binary format)
|title=The Advancement of Learning
:100101<sub>2</sub> (a subscript indicating base-2 (binary) notation)
|url=http://home.hiwaay.net/~paul/bacon/advancement/book6ch1.html
:%100101 (a prefix indicating binary format)
|year=1605
:0b100101 (a prefix indicating binary format, common in programming languages)
|volume=6
|location=London
|pages=Chapter 1
}}
</ref> (See [[Bacon's cipher]].)


In 1617, [[John Napier]] described a system he called [[location arithmetic]] for doing binary calculations using a non-positional representation by letters.
When spoken, binary numerals are usually pronounced by pronouncing each individual digit, in order to distinguish them from decimal numbers. For example, the binary numeral "100" is pronounced "one zero zero", rather than "one hundred", to make its binary nature explicit, and for purposes of correctness. Since the binary numeral "100" is equal to the decimal value four, it would be confusing, and numerically incorrect, to refer to the numeral as "one hundred."
[[Thomas Harriot]] investigated several positional numbering systems, including binary, but did not publish his results; they were found later among his papers.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Shirley|first=John W.|title=Binary numeration before Leibniz|journal=American Journal of Physics|volume=19|year=1951|issue=8|pages=452–454|doi=10.1119/1.1933042|bibcode=1951AmJPh..19..452S}}</ref>
Possibly the first publication of the system in Europe was by [[Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz]], in 1700.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Ineichen|first=R.|title=Leibniz, Caramuel, Harriot und das Dualsystem|language=de|journal=Mitteilungen der deutschen Mathematiker-Vereinigung|volume=16|year=2008|issue=1|pages=12–15|doi=10.1515/dmvm-2008-0009|s2cid=179000299|url=http://page.math.tu-berlin.de/~mdmv/archive/16/mdmv-16-1-12-ineichen.pdf}}</ref>


===Leibniz===
== Counting in binary ==
[[File:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Bernhard Christoph Francke.jpg|thumb|upright|Gottfried Leibniz]]
Leibniz wrote in excess of a hundred manuscripts on binary, most of them remaining unpublished. <ref name=":0">{{Citation |last=Strickland |first=Lloyd |title=Leibniz on Number Systems |date=2020 |work=Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Mathematical Practice |pages=1–31 |editor-last=Sriraman |editor-first=Bharath |url=https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-030-19071-2_90-1 |access-date=2024-08-20 |place=Cham |publisher=Springer International Publishing |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-3-030-19071-2_90-1 |isbn=978-3-030-19071-2}}</ref> Before his first dedicated work in 1679, numerous manuscripts feature early attempts to explore binary concepts, including tables of numbers and basic calculations, often scribbled in the margins of works unrelated to mathematics.<ref name=":0" />


His first known work on binary, ''“On the Binary Progression"'', in 1679, Leibniz introduced conversion between decimal and binary, along with algorithms for performing basic arithmetic operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division using binary numbers. He also developed a form of binary algebra to calculate the square of a six-digit number and to extract square roots.<ref name=":0" />
Counting in binary is similar to counting in any other number system. Beginning with a single digit, counting proceeds through each symbol, in increasing order. Decimal counting uses the symbols '''0''' through '''9''', while binary only uses the symbols '''0''' and '''1'''.


His most well known work appears in his article ''Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire'' (published in 1703).
When the symbols for the first digit are exhausted, the next-higher digit (to the left) is incremented, and counting starts over at 0. In [[decimal]], counting proceeds like so:
The full title of Leibniz's article is translated into English as the ''"Explanation of Binary Arithmetic, which uses only the characters 1 and 0, with some remarks on its usefulness, and on the light it throws on the ancient Chinese figures of [[Fu Xi]]"''.<ref name="lnz">Leibniz G., Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire, Die Mathematische Schriften, ed. C. Gerhardt, Berlin 1879, vol.7, p.223; Engl. transl.[http://www.leibniz-translations.com/binary.htm]</ref> Leibniz's system uses 0 and 1, like the modern binary numeral system. An example of Leibniz's binary numeral system is as follows:<ref name="lnz" />
: 0 0 0 1 &nbsp; numerical value 2<sup>0</sup>
: 0 0 1 0 &nbsp; numerical value 2<sup>1</sup>
: 0 1 0 0 &nbsp; numerical value 2<sup>2</sup>
: 1 0 0 0 &nbsp; numerical value 2<sup>3</sup>


While corresponding with the Jesuit priest [[Joachim Bouvet]] in 1700, who had made himself an expert on the ''I Ching'' while a missionary in China, Leibniz explained his binary notation, and Bouvet demonstrated in his 1701 letters that the ''I Ching'' was an independent, parallel invention of binary notation.
:000, 001, 002, ... 007, 008, 009, (rightmost digit starts over, and next digit is incremented)
Leibniz & Bouvet concluded that this mapping was evidence of major Chinese accomplishments in the sort of philosophical [[mathematics]] he admired.<ref>[https://gwern.net/doc/cs/1980-swiderski.pdf#page=8 "Bouvet and Leibniz: A Scholarly Correspondence"], Swiderski 1980</ref> Of this parallel invention, Leibniz wrote in his "Explanation Of Binary Arithmetic" that "this restitution of their meaning, after such a great interval of time, will seem all the more curious."<ref>[https://www.leibniz-translations.com/binary.htm Leibniz]: "The Chinese lost the meaning of the Cova or Lineations of Fuxi, perhaps more than a thousand years ago, and they have written commentaries on the subject in which they have sought I know not what far out meanings, so that their true explanation now has to come from Europeans. Here is how: It was scarcely more than two years ago that I sent to Reverend Father Bouvet,<sup>3</sup> the celebrated French Jesuit who lives in Peking, my method of counting by 0 and 1, and nothing more was required to make him recognize that this was the key to the figures of Fuxi. Writing to me on 14 November 1701, he sent me this philosophical prince's grand figure, which goes up to 64, and leaves no further room to doubt the truth of our interpretation, such that it can be said that this Father has deciphered the enigma of Fuxi, with the help of what I had communicated to him. And as these figures are perhaps the most ancient monument of [GM VII, p227] science which exists in the world, this restitution of their meaning, after such a great interval of time, will seem all the more curious."</ref>
:0'''1'''0, 011, 012, ...
:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...
:090, 091, 092, ... 097, 098, 099, (rightmost two digits start over, and next digit is incremented)
:'''1'''00, 101, 102, ...


The relation was a central idea to his universal concept of a language or [[characteristica universalis]], a popular idea that would be followed closely by his successors such as [[Gottlob Frege]] and [[George Boole]] in forming [[Propositional Calculus|modern symbolic logic]].<ref>{{Cite book
After a digit reaches 9, an increment resets it to 0 but also causes an increment of the next digit to the left. In binary, counting is the same except that only the two symbols 0 and 1 are used. Thus after a digit reaches 1 in binary, an increment resets it to 0 but also causes an increment of the next digit to the left:
|last=Aiton
|first=Eric J.
|title=Leibniz: A Biography
|year=1985
|publisher=Taylor & Francis
|isbn=0-85274-470-6
|pages=245–8
}}</ref>
Leibniz was first introduced to the ''[[I Ching]]'' through his contact with the French Jesuit [[Joachim Bouvet]], who visited China in 1685 as a missionary. Leibniz saw the ''I Ching'' hexagrams as an affirmation of the [[Universality (philosophy)|universality]] of his own religious beliefs as a Christian.<ref name="smith">{{cite book|author1=J.E.H. Smith|title=Leibniz: What Kind of Rationalist?: What Kind of Rationalist?|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Da_oP3sJs1oC&pg=PA4153|year=2008|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-1-4020-8668-7|page=415}}</ref> Binary numerals were central to Leibniz's theology. He believed that binary numbers were symbolic of the Christian idea of ''[[creatio ex nihilo]]'' or creation out of nothing.<ref name="lniz">{{cite book|author1=Yuen-Ting Lai|title=Leibniz, Mysticism and Religion|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U9dOmVt81UAC&pg=PA149|year=1998|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-0-7923-5223-5|pages=149–150}}</ref>


{{quote|[A concept that] is not easy to impart to the pagans, is the creation ''ex nihilo'' through God's almighty power. Now one can say that nothing in the world can better present and demonstrate this power than the origin of numbers, as it is presented here through the simple and unadorned presentation of One and Zero or Nothing.|Leibniz's letter to the [[Rudolph Augustus, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg|Duke of Brunswick]] attached with the ''I Ching'' hexagrams<ref name="smith"/>}}
:000, 001, (rightmost digit starts over, and next digit is incremented)
:0'''1'''0, 011, (rightmost two digits start over, and next digit is incremented)
:'''1'''00, 101, ...


===Later developments===
== Binary simplified ==
[[File:George Boole color.jpg|thumb|left|160px|George Boole]]
One can think about binary by comparing it with our usual numbers. We use a [[Decimal|base ten]] system. This means that the value of each position in a numerical value can be represented by one of ten possible symbols: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9. We are all familiar with these and how the decimal system works using these ten symbols. When we begin counting values, we should start with the symbol 0, and proceed to 9 when counting. We call this the "ones", or "units" place.
In 1854, British mathematician [[George Boole]] published a landmark paper detailing an [[algebra]]ic system of [[logic]] that would become known as [[Boolean algebra (logic)|Boolean algebra]]. His logical calculus was to become instrumental in the design of digital electronic circuitry.<ref>{{cite book |last=Boole |first=George |orig-year=1854 |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/15114 |title=An Investigation of the Laws of Thought on Which are Founded the Mathematical Theories of Logic and Probabilities |publisher=Cambridge University Press |edition=Macmillan, Dover Publications, reprinted with corrections [1958] |location=New York |year=2009 |isbn=978-1-108-00153-3}}</ref>


In 1937, [[Claude Shannon]] produced his master's thesis at [[MIT]] that implemented Boolean algebra and binary arithmetic using electronic relays and switches for the first time in history. Entitled ''[[A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits]]'', Shannon's thesis essentially founded practical [[digital circuit]] design.<ref>{{cite thesis |title=A symbolic analysis of relay and switching circuits |last=Shannon |first=Claude Elwood |publisher=Massachusetts Institute of Technology |location=Cambridge |year=1940 |hdl=1721.1/11173 |type=Thesis }}</ref>
The "ones" place, with those digits, might be thought of as a multiplication problem. 5 can be thought of as 5 × 10<sup>0</sup> (10 to the zeroeth power, which equals 5 × 1, since any number to the zero power is one). As we move to the left of the ones place, we increase the power of 10 by one. Thus, to represent 50 in this same manner, it can be thought of as 5 × 10<sup>1</sup>, or 5 × 10.


In November 1937, [[George Stibitz]], then working at [[Bell Labs]], completed a relay-based computer he dubbed the "Model K" (for "'''K'''itchen", where he had assembled it), which calculated using binary addition.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.invent.org/hall_of_fame/140.html |title=National Inventors Hall of Fame – George R. Stibitz |date=20 August 2008 |access-date=5 July 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100709213530/http://www.invent.org/hall_of_fame/140.html |archive-date=9 July 2010}}</ref> Bell Labs authorized a full research program in late 1938 with Stibitz at the helm. Their Complex Number Computer, completed 8 January 1940, was able to calculate [[complex numbers]]. In a demonstration to the [[American Mathematical Society]] conference at [[Dartmouth College]] on 11 September 1940, Stibitz was able to send the Complex Number Calculator remote commands over telephone lines by a [[Teleprinter|teletype]]. It was the first computing machine ever used remotely over a phone line. Some participants of the conference who witnessed the demonstration were [[John von Neumann]], [[John Mauchly]] and [[Norbert Wiener]], who wrote about it in his memoirs.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://stibitz.denison.edu/bio.html |title=George Stibitz : Bio |publisher=Math & Computer Science Department, Denison University |date=30 April 2004 |access-date=5 July 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kerryr.net/pioneers/stibitz.htm |title=Pioneers – The people and ideas that made a difference – George Stibitz (1904–1995) |publisher=Kerry Redshaw |date=20 February 2006 |access-date=5 July 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://ei.cs.vt.edu/~history/Stibitz.html |title=George Robert Stibitz – Obituary |publisher=Computer History Association of California |date=6 February 1995 |access-date=5 July 2010}}</ref>
:<math>500 = (5 \times 10^2) + (0 \times 10^1) + (0 \times 10^0)</math>
:<math>5834 = (5 \times 10^3) + (8 \times 10^2) + (3 \times 10^1) + (4 \times 10^0)</math>


The [[Z1 (computer)|Z1 computer]], which was designed and built by [[Konrad Zuse]] between 1935 and 1938, used [[Boolean logic]] and binary [[Floating-point arithmetic|floating-point numbers]].<ref name="zuse">{{cite journal |title=Konrad Zuse's Legacy: The Architecture of the Z1 and Z3 |author-last=Rojas |author-first=Raúl |author-link=Raúl Rojas |journal=[[IEEE Annals of the History of Computing]] |volume=19 |number=2 |date=April–June 1997 |pages=5–16 |doi=10.1109/85.586067 |url=http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/Zuse_Z1_and_Z3.pdf |access-date=2022-07-03 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220703082408/http://ed-thelen.org/comp-hist/Zuse_Z1_and_Z3.pdf |archive-date=2022-07-03}} (12 pages)</ref>
When we run out of symbols in the decimal numeral system, we "move to the left" one place and use a "1" to represent the "tens" place. Then we reset the symbol in the "ones" place back to the first symbol, zero.


==Representation==
Binary is a base two system which works just like our decimal system, however with only two symbols which can be used to represent numerical values: 0 and 1. We begin in the "ones" place with 0, then go up to 1. Now we are out of symbols, so to represent a higher value, we must place a "1" in the "twos" place, since we don't have a symbol we can use in the binary system for 2, like we do in the decimal system.
Any number can be represented by a sequence of [[bit]]s (binary digits), which in turn may be represented by any mechanism capable of being in two mutually exclusive states. Any of the following rows of symbols can be interpreted as the binary numeric value of 667:


{| style="text-align:center;"
In the binary numeral system, the value represented as 10 is (1 × 2<sup>1</sup>) + (0 × 2<sup>0</sup>). Thus, it equals "2" in our decimal system.
| 1 || 0 || 1 || 0 || 0 || 1 || 1 || 0 || 1 || 1
|-
| <nowiki>|</nowiki> || ― || <nowiki>|</nowiki> || ― || ― || <nowiki>|</nowiki> || <nowiki>|</nowiki> || ― || <nowiki>|</nowiki> || <nowiki>|</nowiki>
|-
| ☒ || ☐ || ☒ || ☐ || ☐ || ☒ || ☒ || ☐ || ☒ || ☒
|-
| y || n || y || n || n || y || y || n || y || y
|-
| T || F || T || F || F || T || T || F || T || T
|}


[[Image:Binary clock.svg|250px|thumbnail|right|A [[binary clock]] might use [[Light-emitting diode|LEDs]] to express binary values. In this clock, each column of LEDs shows a [[binary-coded decimal]] numeral of the traditional [[sexagesimal]] time.]]
Binary-to-decimal equivalence:
:<math>1_2 = 1 \times 2^0 = 1 \times 1 = 1_{10}</math>
:<math>10_2 = (1 \times 2^1) + (0 \times 2^0) = 2 + 0 = 2_{10}</math>
:<math>101_2 = (1 \times 2^2) + (0 \times 2^1) + (1 \times 2^0) = 4 + 0 + 1 = 5_{10}</math>


The numeric value represented in each case depends on the value assigned to each symbol. In the earlier days of computing, switches, punched holes, and punched paper tapes were used to represent binary values.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.com/bitesize/guides/zwsbwmn/revision/1|title=Introducing binary – Revision 1 – GCSE Computer Science|website=BBC|access-date=2019-06-26}}</ref> In a modern computer, the numeric values may be represented by two different [[voltage]]s; on a [[Magnetic field|magnetic]] [[Disk storage|disk]], [[Magnetic polarity|magnetic polarities]] may be used. A "positive", "[[yes and no|yes]]", or "on" state is not necessarily equivalent to the numerical value of one; it depends on the architecture in use.
To see the actual algorithm used in computing the conversion, see the [[#Conversion to and from other numeral systems|conversion guide]] below.


In keeping with the customary representation of numerals using [[Arabic numerals]], binary numbers are commonly written using the symbols '''0''' and '''1'''. When written, binary numerals are often subscripted, prefixed, or suffixed to indicate their base, or [[radix]]. The following notations are equivalent:
Here is another way of thinking about it: When you run out of symbols, for example 11111, add a "1" on the left end and reset all the numerals on the right to "0", producing 100000. This also works for symbols in the middle. Say the number is 100111. If you add one to it, you move the leftmost repeating "1" one space to the left (from the "fours" place to the "eights" place) and reset all the numerals on the right to "0", producing 101000.
* 100101 binary (explicit statement of format)
* 100101b (a suffix indicating binary format; also known as [[Intel convention]]<ref name="Kueveler-Schwoch_1996">{{cite book|title=Arbeitsbuch Informatik – eine praxisorientierte Einführung in die Datenverarbeitung mit Projektaufgabe|language=de|first1=Gerd|last1=Küveler|first2=Dietrich|last2=Schwoch|date=2013|orig-year=1996|publisher=Vieweg-Verlag, reprint: Springer-Verlag|isbn=978-3-528-04952-2|id=9783322929075|doi=10.1007/978-3-322-92907-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b8-dBgAAQBAJ}}</ref><ref name="Kueveler-Schwoch_2007">{{cite book|title=Informatik für Ingenieure und Naturwissenschaftler: PC- und Mikrocomputertechnik, Rechnernetze|language=de|first1=Gerd|last1=Küveler|first2=Dietrich|last2=Schwoch|date=2007-10-04|publisher=Vieweg, reprint: Springer-Verlag|edition=5|volume=2|isbn=978-3834891914|id=9783834891914|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xQbvPYxceY0C}}</ref>)
* 100101B (a suffix indicating binary format)
* bin 100101 (a prefix indicating binary format)
* 100101<sub>2</sub> (a subscript indicating base-2 (binary) notation)
* %100101 (a prefix indicating binary format; also known as [[Motorola convention]]<ref name="Kueveler-Schwoch_1996"/><ref name="Kueveler-Schwoch_2007"/>)
* 0b100101 (a prefix indicating binary format, common in programming languages)
* 6b100101 (a prefix indicating number of bits in binary format, common in programming languages)
* #b100101 (a prefix indicating binary format, common in Lisp programming languages)


When spoken, binary numerals are usually read digit-by-digit, to distinguish them from decimal numerals. For example, the binary numeral 100 is pronounced ''one zero zero'', rather than ''one hundred'', to make its binary nature explicit and for purposes of correctness. Since the binary numeral 100 represents the value four, it would be confusing to refer to the numeral as ''one hundred'' (a word that represents a completely different value, or amount). Alternatively, the binary numeral 100 can be read out as "four" (the correct ''value''), but this does not make its binary nature explicit.
== Binary arithmetic ==


==Counting in binary==
Arithmetic in binary is much like arithmetic in other numeral systems. Addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division can be performed on binary numerals.
{{Aligned table |class=wikitable |cols=2
|style=float:right; |rowstyle=text-align:right;
|row1header=y
| Decimal<br>number | Binary<br>number
| 0 | 0
| 1 | 1
| 2 | 10
| 3 | 11
| 4 | 100
| 5 | 101
| 6 | 110
| 7 | 111
| 8 | 1000
| 9 | 1001
| 10 | 1010
| 11 | 1011
| 12 | 1100
| 13 | 1101
| 14 | 1110
| 15 | 1111
}}
Counting in binary is similar to counting in any other number system. Beginning with a single digit, counting proceeds through each symbol, in increasing order. Before examining binary counting, it is useful to briefly discuss the more familiar [[decimal]] counting system as a frame of reference.

===Decimal counting===
[[Decimal]] counting uses the ten symbols ''0'' through ''9''. Counting begins with the incremental substitution of the least significant digit (rightmost digit) which is often called the ''first digit''. When the available symbols for this position are exhausted, the least significant digit is reset to ''0'', and the next digit of higher significance (one position to the left) is incremented (''overflow''), and incremental substitution of the low-order digit resumes. This method of reset and overflow is repeated for each digit of significance. Counting progresses as follows:

:000, 001, 002, ... 007, 008, 009, (rightmost digit is reset to zero, and the digit to its left is incremented)
:0'''1'''0, 011, 012, ...
:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...
:090, 091, 092, ... 097, 098, 099, (rightmost two digits are reset to zeroes, and next digit is incremented)
:'''1'''00, 101, 102, ...

===Binary counting===
[[File:Binary counter.gif|thumb|This counter shows how to count in binary from numbers zero through thirty-one.]]
[[File:Binary_guess_number_trick_SMIL.svg|thumb|upright|link={{filepath:binary_guess_number_trick_SMIL.svg}}|A party trick to guess a number from which cards it is printed on uses the bits of the binary representation of the number. In the SVG file, click a card to toggle it]]
Binary counting follows the exact same procedure, and again the incremental substitution begins with the least significant binary digit, or ''bit'' (the rightmost one, also called the ''first bit''), except that only the two symbols ''0'' and ''1'' are available. Thus, after a bit reaches 1 in binary, an increment resets it to 0 but also causes an increment of the next bit to the left:

:0000,
:000'''1''', (rightmost bit starts over, and the next bit is incremented)
:00'''1'''0, 0011, (rightmost two bits start over, and the next bit is incremented)
:0'''1'''00, 0101, 0110, 0111, (rightmost three bits start over, and the next bit is incremented)
:'''1'''000, 1001, 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101, 1110, 1111 ...

In the binary system, each bit represents an increasing power of 2, with the rightmost bit representing 2<sup>0</sup>, the next representing 2<sup>1</sup>, then 2<sup>2</sup>, and so on. The value of a binary number is the sum of the powers of 2 represented by each "1" bit. For example, the binary number 100101 is converted to decimal form as follows:

:100101<sub>2</sub> = [ ( '''1''' ) × 2<sup>5</sup> ] + [ ( '''0''' ) × 2<sup>4</sup> ] + [ ( '''0''' ) × 2<sup>3</sup> ] + [ ( '''1''' ) × 2<sup>2</sup> ] + [ ( '''0''' ) × 2<sup>1</sup> ] + [ ( '''1''' ) × 2<sup>0</sup> ]

:100101<sub>2</sub> = [ '''1''' × 32 ] + [ '''0''' × 16 ] + [ '''0''' × 8 ] + [ '''1''' × 4 ] + [ '''0''' × 2 ] + [ '''1''' × 1 ]

:'''100101<sub>2</sub> = 37<sub>10</sub>'''

==Fractions==

[[Fractions]] in binary arithmetic [[Repeating decimal|terminate]] only if the [[denominator]] is a [[power of 2]]. As a result, 1/10 does not have a finite binary representation ('''10''' has prime factors '''2''' and '''5'''). This causes 10 × 1/10 not to precisely equal 1 in binary [[floating-point arithmetic]]. As an example, to interpret the binary expression for 1/3 = .010101..., this means: 1/3 = 0 × '''2<sup>−1</sup>''' + 1 × '''2<sup>−2</sup>''' + 0 × '''2<sup>−3</sup>''' + 1 × '''2<sup>−4</sup>''' + ... = 0.3125 + ... An exact value cannot be found with a sum of a finite number of inverse powers of two, the zeros and ones in the binary representation of 1/3 alternate forever.

{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Fraction
! [[Base 10|Decimal]]
! Binary
! Fractional approximation
|-
| 1/1
| 1{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.999...
| 1{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.{{Overline|1}}
| 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8...
|-
| 1/2
| 0.5{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.4999...
| 0.1{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.0{{Overline|1}}
| 1/4 + 1/8 + 1/16 . . .
|-
| 1/3
| 0.333...
| 0.{{Overline|01}}
| 1/4 + 1/16 + 1/64 . . .
|-
| 1/4
| 0.25{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.24999...
| 0.01{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.00{{Overline|1}}
| 1/8 + 1/16 + 1/32 . . .
|-
| 1/5
| 0.2{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.1999...
| 0.{{Overline|0011}}
| 1/8 + 1/16 + 1/128 . . .
|-
| 1/6
| 0.1666...
| 0.0{{Overline|01}}
| 1/8 + 1/32 + 1/128 . . .
|-
| 1/7
| 0.142857142857...
| 0.{{Overline|001}}
| 1/8 + 1/64 + 1/512 . . .
|-
| 1/8
| 0.125{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.124999...
| 0.001{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.000{{Overline|1}}
| 1/16 + 1/32 + 1/64 . . .
|-
| 1/9
| 0.111...
| 0.{{Overline|000111}}
| 1/16 + 1/32 + 1/64 . . .
|-
| 1/10
| 0.1{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.0999...
| 0.0{{Overline|0011}}
| 1/16 + 1/32 + 1/256 . . .
|-
| 1/11
| 0.090909...
| 0.{{Overline|0001011101}}
| 1/16 + 1/64 + 1/128 . . .
|-
| 1/12
| 0.08333...
| 0.00{{Overline|01}}
| 1/16 + 1/64 + 1/256 . . .
|-
| 1/13
| 0.076923076923...
| 0.{{Overline|000100111011}}
| 1/16 + 1/128 + 1/256 . . .
|-
| 1/14
| 0.0714285714285...
| 0.0{{Overline|001}}
| 1/16 + 1/128 + 1/1024 . . .
|-
| 1/15
| 0.0666...
| 0.{{Overline|0001}}
| 1/16 + 1/256 . . .
|-
| 1/16
| 0.0625{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.0624999...
| 0.0001{{pad|0.25em}}or{{pad|0.25em}}0.0000{{Overline|1}}
| 1/32 + 1/64 + 1/128 . . .
|}


=== Addition ===
==Binary arithmetic==
[[Arithmetic]] in binary is much like arithmetic in other [[positional notation]] [[numeral system]]s. Addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division can be performed on binary numerals.


===Addition===
[[Image:Half-adder.svg|thumbnail|200px|right|The [[circuit diagram]] for a binary [[Adder (electronics)|half adder]], which adds two bits together, producing sum and carry bits.]]
{{main | Adder (electronics)}}
[[Image:Half Adder.svg|thumbnail|200px|right|The [[circuit diagram]] for a binary [[Adder (electronics)|half adder]], which adds two bits together, producing sum and carry bits]]


The simplest arithmetic operation in binary is [[addition]]. Adding two single-digit binary numbers is relatively simple:
The simplest arithmetic operation in binary is addition. Adding two single-digit binary numbers is relatively simple, using a form of carrying:


:0 + 0 = 0
:0 + 0 0
:0 + 1 = 1
:0 + 1 1
:1 + 0 = 1
:1 + 0 1
:1 + 1 → 0, carry 1 (since 1 + 1 = 2 = 0 + (1 × 2<sup>1</sup>) )
:1 + 1 = 10 (carry:1)
Adding two "1" values produces the value "10" (spoken as "one-zero"), equivalent to the decimal value 2. This is similar to what happens in decimal when certain single-digit numbers are added together; if the result equals or exceeds the value of the radix (10), the digit to the left is incremented:
Adding two "1" digits produces a digit "0", while 1 will have to be added to the next column. This is similar to what happens in decimal when certain single-digit numbers are added together; if the result equals or exceeds the value of the radix (10), the digit to the left is incremented:


:5 + 5 → 0, carry 1 (since 5 + 5 = 10 = 0 + (1 × 10<sup>1</sup>) )
:5 + 5 = 10
:7 + 9 → 6, carry 1 (since 7 + 9 = 16 = 6 + (1 × 10<sup>1</sup>) )
:7 + 9 = 16


This is known as ''carrying'' in most numeral systems. When the result of an addition exceeds the value of the radix, the procedure is to "carry the one" to the left, adding it to the next positional value. Carrying works the same way in binary:
This is known as ''carrying''. When the result of an addition exceeds the value of a digit, the procedure is to "carry" the excess amount divided by the radix (that is, 10/10) to the left, adding it to the next positional value. This is correct since the next position has a weight that is higher by a factor equal to the radix. Carrying works the same way in binary:


1 1 1 1 1 (carry)
{{brown|1 1 1 1 1 (carried digits)}}
0 1 1 0 1
0 1 1 0 1
+ 1 0 1 1 1
+ 1 0 1 1 1
-------------
-------------
= 1 0 0 1 0 0
= 1 0 0 1 0 0 = 36


In this example, two numerals are being added together: 01101<sub>2</sub> (13 decimal) and 10111<sub>2</sub> (23 decimal). The top row shows the carry bits used. Starting in the rightmost column, 1 + 1 = 10<sub>2</sub>. The 1 is carried to the left, and the 0 is written at the bottom of the rightmost column. The second column from the right is added: 1 + 0 + 1 = 10<sub>2</sub> again; the 1 is carried, and 0 is written at the bottom. The third column: 1 + 1 + 1 = 11<sub>2</sub>. This time, a 1 is carried, and a 1 is written in the bottom row. Proceeding like this gives the final answer 100100<sub>2</sub> (36 decimal).
In this example, two numerals are being added together: 01101<sub>2</sub> (13<sub>10</sub>) and 10111<sub>2</sub> (23<sub>10</sub>). The top row shows the carry bits used. Starting in the rightmost column, 1 + 1 = 10<sub>2</sub>. The 1 is carried to the left, and the 0 is written at the bottom of the rightmost column. The second column from the right is added: 1 + 0 + 1 = 10<sub>2</sub> again; the 1 is carried, and 0 is written at the bottom. The third column: 1 + 1 + 1 = 11<sub>2</sub>. This time, a 1 is carried, and a 1 is written in the bottom row. Proceeding like this gives the final answer 100100<sub>2</sub> (36<sub>10</sub>).

When computers must add two numbers, the rule that:
x [[Exclusive or|xor]] y = (x + y) [[Modulo operation|mod]] 2
for any two bits x and y allows for very fast calculation, as well.

====Long carry method====
A simplification for many binary addition problems is the "long carry method" or "Brookhouse Method of Binary Addition". This method is particularly useful when one of the numbers contains a long stretch of ones. It is based on the simple premise that under the binary system, when given a stretch of digits composed entirely of {{varserif|n}} ones (where {{varserif|n}} is any integer length), adding 1 will result in the number 1 followed by a string of {{varserif|n}} zeros. That concept follows, logically, just as in the decimal system, where adding 1 to a string of {{varserif|n}} 9s will result in the number 1 followed by a string of {{varserif|n}} 0s:

Binary Decimal
1 1 1 1 1 likewise 9 9 9 9 9
+ 1 + 1
——————————— ———————————
1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

Such long strings are quite common in the binary system. From that one finds that large binary numbers can be added using two simple steps, without excessive carry operations. In the following example, two numerals are being added together: 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0<sub>2</sub> (958<sub>10</sub>) and 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1<sub>2</sub> (691<sub>10</sub>), using the traditional carry method on the left, and the long carry method on the right:

Traditional Carry Method Long Carry Method
vs.
{{brown|1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 (carried digits) 1 ← 1 ←}} carry the 1 until it is one digit past the "string" below
1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 <s>1 1 1</s> 0 <s>1 1 1 1 1</s> 0 cross out the "string",
+ 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 + 1 0 <s>1</s> 0 1 1 0 0 <s>1</s> 1 and cross out the digit that was added to it
——————————————————————— ——————————————————————
= 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1

The top row shows the carry bits used. Instead of the standard carry from one column to the next, the lowest-ordered "1" with a "1" in the corresponding place value beneath it may be added and a "1" may be carried to one digit past the end of the series. The "used" numbers must be crossed off, since they are already added. Other long strings may likewise be cancelled using the same technique. Then, simply add together any remaining digits normally. Proceeding in this manner gives the final answer of 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1<sub>2</sub> (1649<sub>10</sub>). In our simple example using small numbers, the traditional carry method required eight carry operations, yet the long carry method required only two, representing a substantial reduction of effort.

====Addition table====

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! style="width:1.5em" |
! style="width:1.5em" | 0
! style="width:1.5em" | 1
|-
! 0
| 0
| 1
|-
! 1
| 1
| 10
|}

The binary addition table is similar to, but not the same as, the [[Logical disjunction#Truth table|truth table]] of the [[logical disjunction]] operation <math>\lor</math>. The difference is that <math>1 \lor 1 = 1</math>, while <math>1+1=10</math>.


=== Subtraction ===
=== Subtraction ===
{{further|signed number representations|two's complement}}


[[Subtraction]] works in much the same way:
[[Subtraction]] works in much the same way:


:0 &minus; 0 = 0
:0 0 0
:0 &minus; 1 = 1 (with borrow)
:0 1 1, borrow 1
:1 &minus; 0 = 1
:1 0 1
:1 &minus; 1 = 0
:1 1 0
Subtracting a "1" digit from a "0" digit produces the digit "1", while 1 will have to be subtracted from the next column. This is known as ''borrowing''. The principle is the same as for carrying. When the result of a subtraction is less than 0, the least possible value of a digit, the procedure is to "borrow" the deficit divided by the radix (that is, 10/10) from the left, subtracting it from the next positional value.

One binary numeral can be subtracted from another as follows:


* * * * (starred columns are borrowed from)
* * * * (starred columns are borrowed from)
Line 132: Line 380:
= 1 0 1 0 1 1 1
= 1 0 1 0 1 1 1


* (starred columns are borrowed from)
Subtracting a positive number is equivalent to ''adding'' a [[Negative and non-negative numbers|negative]] number of equal [[absolute value]]; computers typically use [[two's complement]] notation to represent negative values. This notation eliminates the need for a separate "subtract" operation. The subtraction can be summarized with this formula:
1 0 1 1 1 1 1
– 1 0 1 0 1 1
----------------
= 0 1 1 0 1 0 0


Subtracting a positive number is equivalent to ''adding'' a [[negative number]] of equal [[absolute value]]. Computers use [[signed number representations]] to handle negative numbers—most commonly the [[two's complement]] notation. Such representations eliminate the need for a separate "subtract" operation. Using two's complement notation, subtraction can be summarized by the following formula:
'''A - B = A + not B + 1'''


: {{math|1=A − B = A + not B + 1}}
For further details, see [[two's complement]].


=== Multiplication ===
===Multiplication===<!-- This section is linked from [[Binary-coded decimal]] -->
[[Multiplication]] in binary is similar to its decimal counterpart. Two numbers {{varserif|A}} and {{varserif|B}} can be multiplied by partial products: for each digit in {{varserif|B}}, the product of that digit in {{varserif|A}} is calculated and written on a new line, shifted leftward so that its rightmost digit lines up with the digit in {{varserif|B}} that was used. The sum of all these partial products gives the final result.

[[Multiplication]] in binary is similar to its decimal counterpart. Two numbers ''A'' and ''B'' can be multiplied by partial products: for each digit in ''B'', the product of that digit in ''A'' is calculated and written on a new line, shifted leftward so that its rightmost digit lines up with the digit in ''B'' that was used. The sum of all these partial products gives the final result.


Since there are only two digits in binary, there are only two possible outcomes of each partial multiplication:
Since there are only two digits in binary, there are only two possible outcomes of each partial multiplication:
* If the digit in {{varserif|B}} is 0, the partial product is also 0

* If the digit in ''B'' is 0, the partial product is also 0
* If the digit in {{varserif|B}} is 1, the partial product is equal to {{varserif|A}}
* If the digit in ''B'' is 1, the partial product is equal to ''A''


For example, the binary numbers 1011 and 1010 are multiplied as follows:
For example, the binary numbers 1011 and 1010 are multiplied as follows:


1 0 1 1 (A)
1 0 1 1 ({{varserif|A}})
× 1 0 1 0 (B)
× 1 0 1 0 ({{varserif|B}})
---------
---------
0 0 0 0 &larr; Corresponds to a zero in B
0 0 0 0 Corresponds to the rightmost 'zero' in {{varserif|B}}
+ 1 0 1 1 &larr; Corresponds to a one in B
+ 1 0 1 1 Corresponds to the next 'one' in {{varserif|B}}
+ 0 0 0 0
+ 0 0 0 0
+ 1 0 1 1
+ 1 0 1 1
---------------
---------------
= 1 1 0 1 1 1 0
= 1 1 0 1 1 1 0

Binary numbers can also be multiplied with bits after a [[binary point]]:

1 0 1 . 1 0 1 {{varserif|A}} (5.625 in decimal)
× 1 1 0 . 0 1 {{varserif|B}} (6.25 in decimal)
-------------------
1 . 0 1 1 0 1 ← Corresponds to a 'one' in {{varserif|B}}
+ 0 0 . 0 0 0 0 ← Corresponds to a 'zero' in {{varserif|B}}
+ 0 0 0 . 0 0 0
+ 1 0 1 1 . 0 1
+ 1 0 1 1 0 . 1
---------------------------
= 1 0 0 0 1 1 . 0 0 1 0 1 (35.15625 in decimal)


See also [[Booth's multiplication algorithm]].
See also [[Booth's multiplication algorithm]].


=== Division ===
====Multiplication table====
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! style="width:1.5em" |
! style="width:1.5em" | 1
! style="width:1.5em" | 1
|-
! 0
| 0
| 0
|-
! 1
| 0
| 1
|}


The binary multiplication table is the same as the [[Logical conjunction#Truth table|truth table]] of the [[logical conjunction]] operation <math>\land</math>.
Binary [[Division (mathematics)|division]] is again similar to its decimal counterpart:


===Division===
__________
{{See also|Division algorithm#Integer division (unsigned) with remainder}}
1 0 1 | 1 1 0 1 1


[[Long division]] in binary is again similar to its decimal counterpart.
Here, the divisor is 101<sub>2</sub>, or 5 decimal, while the dividend is 11011<sub>2</sub>, or 27 decimal. The procedure is the same as that of decimal [[long division]]; here, the divisor 101<sub>2</sub> goes into the first three digits 110<sub>2</sub> of the dividend one time, so a "1" is written on the top line. This result is multiplied by the divisor, and subtracted from the first three digits of the dividend; the next digit (a "1") is included to obtain a new three-digit sequence:


In the example below, the [[divisor]] is 101<sub>2</sub>, or 5 in decimal, while the [[Division (mathematics)|dividend]] is 11011<sub>2</sub>, or 27 in decimal. The procedure is the same as that of decimal [[long division]]; here, the divisor 101<sub>2</sub> goes into the first three digits 110<sub>2</sub> of the dividend one time, so a "1" is written on the top line. This result is multiplied by the divisor, and subtracted from the first three digits of the dividend; the next digit (a "1") is included to obtain a new three-digit sequence:
1

__________
1 0 1 | 1 1 0 1 1
1
1 0 1
___________
-----
1 0 1 ) 1 1 0 1 1
0 1 1
1 0 1
-----
0 0 1


The procedure is then repeated with the new sequence, continuing until the digits in the dividend have been exhausted:
The procedure is then repeated with the new sequence, continuing until the digits in the dividend have been exhausted:


1 0 1
1 0 1
__________
___________
1 0 1 | 1 1 0 1 1
1 0 1 ) 1 1 0 1 1
− 1 0 1
− 1 0 1
-----
-----
0 1 1
− 0 0 0
-----
1 1 1
1 1 1
1 0 1
1 0 1
-----
-----
1 0
0 1 0


Thus, the quotient of 11011<sub>2</sub> divided by 101<sub>2</sub> is 101<sub>2</sub>, as shown on the top line, while the remainder, shown on the bottom line, is 10<sub>2</sub>. In decimal, 27 divided by 5 is 5, with a remainder of 2.
Thus, the [[quotient]] of 11011<sub>2</sub> divided by 101<sub>2</sub> is 101<sub>2</sub>, as shown on the top line, while the remainder, shown on the bottom line, is 10<sub>2</sub>. In decimal, this corresponds to the fact that 27 divided by 5 is 5, with a remainder of 2.


Aside from long division, one can also devise the procedure so as to allow for over-subtracting from the partial remainder at each iteration, thereby leading to alternative methods which are less systematic, but more flexible as a result.
== Bitwise operations ==
{{main|bitwise operation}}
Though not directly related to the numerical interpretation of binary symbols, sequences of bits may be manipulated using [[Boolean algebra|Boolean]] [[logical operator]]s. When a string of binary symbols is manipulated in this way, it is called a [[bitwise operation]]; the logical operators [[Logical conjunction|AND]], [[Logical disjunction|OR]], and [[Exclusive disjunction|XOR]] may be performed on corresponding bits in two binary numerals provided as input. The logical [[Negation|NOT]] operation may be performed on individual bits in a single binary numeral provided as input. Sometimes, such operations may be used as arithmetic short-cuts, and may have other computational benefits as well. For example, an [[arithmetic shift]] left of a binary number is the equivalent of multiplication by a (positive, integral) power of 2.


===Square root===
== Conversion to and from other numeral systems ==
The process of taking a binary square root digit by digit is the same as for a decimal square root and is explained [[Methods of computing square roots#Binary numeral system (base 2)|here]]. An example is:


1 0 0 1
=== Decimal ===
---------
√ 1010001
1
---------
101 01
0
--------
1001 100
0
--------
10001 10001
10001
-------
0


==Bitwise operations==
To convert from a base-10 integer numeral to its base-2 (binary) equivalent, the number is divided by two, and the remainder is the [[least-significant bit]]. The (integer) result is again divided by two, its remainder is the next most significant bit. This process repeats until the result of further division becomes zero.
{{Main|Bitwise operation}}
Though not directly related to the numerical interpretation of binary symbols, sequences of bits may be manipulated using [[logical connective|Boolean logical operators]]. When a string of binary symbols is manipulated in this way, it is called a [[bitwise operation]]; the logical operators [[Logical conjunction|AND]], [[Logical disjunction|OR]], and [[Exclusive disjunction|XOR]] may be performed on corresponding bits in two binary numerals provided as input. The logical [[Negation|NOT]] operation may be performed on individual bits in a single binary numeral provided as input. Sometimes, such operations may be used as arithmetic short-cuts, and may have other computational benefits as well. For example, an [[arithmetic shift]] left of a binary number is the equivalent of multiplication by a (positive, integral) power of 2.


==Conversion to and from other numeral systems==
For example, 118<sub>10</sub>, in binary, is:


===Decimal to binary===
:{| class="wikitable"
[[File:Decimal to Binary Conversion.gif|alt=|frame|Conversion of (357)<sub>10</sub> to binary notation results in (101100101)]]
!Operation!!Remainder
To convert from a base-10 [[Integer (computer science)|integer]] to its base-2 (binary) equivalent, the number is [[division by two|divided by two]]. The remainder is the [[least-significant bit]]. The quotient is again divided by two; its remainder becomes the next least significant bit. This process repeats until a quotient of one is reached. The sequence of remainders (including the final quotient of one) forms the binary value, as each remainder must be either zero or one when dividing by two. For example, (357)<sub>10</sub> is expressed as (101100101)<sub>2.</sub><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.chalkstreet.com/aptipedia/knowledgebase/base-system/|title=Base System|access-date=31 August 2016|archive-date=23 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171023010521/https://www.chalkstreet.com/aptipedia/knowledgebase/base-system/|url-status=dead}}</ref>
|-
|118 ÷ 2 = 59 ||align="center"|0
|-
|59 ÷ 2 = 29 ||align="center"|1
|-
|29 ÷ 2 = 14 ||align="center"|1
|-
|14 ÷ 2 = 7 ||align="center"|0
|-
|7 ÷ 2 = 3 ||align="center"|1
|-
|3 ÷ 2 = 1 ||align="center"|1
|-
|1 ÷ 2 = 0 ||align="center"|1
|}


=== Binary to decimal ===
Reading the sequence of remainders from the bottom up gives the binary numeral <math>1110110_2</math>.
Conversion from base-2 to base-10 simply inverts the preceding algorithm. The bits of the binary number are used one by one, starting with the most significant (leftmost) bit. Beginning with the value 0, the prior value is doubled, and the next bit is then added to produce the next value. This can be organized in a multi-column table. For example, to convert 10010101101<sub>2</sub> to decimal:


{| style= "border: 1px solid #a2a9b1; border-spacing: 3px; background-color: #f8f9fa; color: black; margin: 0.5em 0 0.5em 1em; padding: 0.2em; line-height: 1.5em; width:22em"
This method works for conversion from any base, but there are better methods for bases which are powers of two, such as [[octal]] and [[hexadecimal]] given below.
!Prior value

! style="text-align:left" | × 2 +
To convert from base-2 to base-10 is the reverse algorithm. Starting from the left, double the result and add the next digit until there are no more. For example to convert 110010101101<sub>2</sub> to decimal:
!Next bit

!= Next value
:{| class="wikitable"
!Result!!Remaining digits
|-
|'''0'''||align="right"|110010101101
|-
|0 × 2 + 1 = '''1'''||align="right"|10010101101
|-
|-
|1 × 2 + 1 = '''3'''||align="right"|0010101101
|align="right"|0 ||× 2 +|| '''1''' || = 1
|-
|-
|3 × 2 + 0 = '''6'''||align="right"|010101101
|align="right"|1 ||× 2 +|| '''0''' || = 2
|-
|-
|6 × 2 + 0 = '''12'''||align="right"|10101101
|align="right"|2 ||× 2 +|| '''0''' || = 4
|-
|-
|12 × 2 + 1 = '''25'''||align="right"|0101101
|align="right"|4 ||× 2 +|| '''1''' || = 9
|-
|-
|25 × 2 + 0 = '''50'''||align="right"|101101
|align="right"|9 ||× 2 +|| '''0''' || = 18
|-
|-
|50 × 2 + 1 = '''101'''||align="right"|01101
|align="right"|18 ||× 2 +|| '''1''' || = 37
|-
|-
|101 × 2 + 0 = '''202'''||align="right"|1101
|align="right"|37 ||× 2 +|| '''0''' || = 74
|-
|-
|202 × 2 + 1 = '''405'''||align="right"|101
|align="right"|74 ||× 2 +|| '''1''' || = 149
|-
|-
|405 × 2 + 1 = '''811'''||align="right"|01
|align="right"|149 ||× 2 +|| '''1''' || = 299
|-
|-
|811 × 2 + 0 = '''1622'''||align="right"|1
|align="right"|299 ||× 2 +|| '''0''' || = 598
|-
|-
|1622 × 2 + 1 = '''3245'''||align="right"|
|align="right"|598 ||× 2 +|| '''1''' || = '''1197'''
|}
|}


The result is 1197<sub>10</sub>. The first Prior Value of 0 is simply an initial decimal value. This method is an application of the [[Horner scheme]].
The result is 3245<sub>10</sub>.


{|
The fractional parts of a numbers are converted with similar methods. They are again based on the equivalence of shifting with doubling or halving.
! Binary&nbsp;
| 1 || 0 || 0 || 1 || 0 || 1 || 0 || 1 || 1 || 0 || 1 ||
|-
! Decimal&nbsp;
| 1×2<sup>10</sup> + || 0×2<sup>9</sup> + || 0×2<sup>8</sup> + || 1×2<sup>7</sup> + || 0×2<sup>6</sup> + || 1×2<sup>5</sup> + || 0×2<sup>4</sup> + || 1×2<sup>3</sup> + || 1×2<sup>2</sup> + || 0×2<sup>1</sup> + || 1×2<sup>0</sup> = || 1197
|}


The fractional parts of a number are converted with similar methods. They are again based on the equivalence of shifting with doubling or halving.
In a fractional binary number such as .11010110101<sub>2</sub>, the first digit is <math>\begin{matrix} \frac{1}{2} \end{matrix}</math>, the second <math>\begin{matrix} (\frac{1}{2})^2 = \frac{1}{4} \end{matrix}</math>, etc. So if there is a 1 in the first place after the decimal, then the number is at least <math>\begin{matrix} \frac{1}{2} \end{matrix}</math>, and vice versa. Double that number is at least 1. This suggests the algorithm: Repeatedly double the number to be converted, record if the result is at least 1, and then throw away the integer part.


In a fractional binary number such as 0.11010110101<sub>2</sub>, the first digit is <math display="inline">\frac{1}{2} </math>, the second <math display="inline"> (\frac{1}{2})^2 = \frac{1}{4} </math>, etc. So if there is a 1 in the first place after the decimal, then the number is at least <math display="inline"> \frac{1}{2} </math>, and vice versa. Double that number is at least 1. This suggests the algorithm: Repeatedly double the number to be converted, record if the result is at least 1, and then throw away the integer part.
For example, <math>\begin{matrix} (\frac{1}{3}) \end{matrix}</math><sub>10</sub>, in binary, is:


For example, <math display="inline"> (\frac{1}{3})_{10} </math>, in binary, is:
:{| class="wikitable"

{| class="wikitable"
!Converting!!Result
!Converting!!Result
|-
|-
|<math>\begin{matrix} \frac{1}{3} \end{matrix}</math> || 0.
|<math display="inline"> \frac{1}{3} </math> || 0.
|-
|-
|<math>\begin{matrix} \frac{1}{3} \times 2 = \frac{2}{3} < 1 \end{matrix}</math> || 0.0
|<math display="inline"> \frac{1}{3} \times 2 = \frac{2}{3} < 1 </math> || 0.0
|-
|-
|<math>\begin{matrix} \frac{2}{3} \times 2 = 1\frac{1}{3} \ge 1 \end{matrix}</math> || 0.01
|<math display="inline"> \frac{2}{3} \times 2 = 1\frac{1}{3} \ge 1</math> || 0.01
|-
|-
|<math>\begin{matrix} \frac{1}{3} \times 2 = \frac{2}{3} < 1 \end{matrix}</math> || 0.010
|<math display="inline"> \frac{1}{3} \times 2 = \frac{2}{3} < 1 </math> || 0.010
|-
|-
|<math>\begin{matrix} \frac{2}{3} \times 2 = 1\frac{1}{3} \ge 1 \end{matrix}</math> || 0.0101
|<math display="inline"> \frac{2}{3} \times 2 = 1\frac{1}{3} \ge 1 </math> || 0.0101
|}
|}


Thus the repeating decimal fraction 0.33{{overline|3}}... is equivalent to the repeating binary fraction 0.01{{overline|01}}... .
Thus the repeating decimal fraction 0.{{overline|3}}... is equivalent to the repeating binary fraction 0.{{overline|01}}... .


Or for example, 0.1<sub>10</sub>, in binary, is:
Or for example, 0.1<sub>10</sub>, in binary, is:


:{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! Converting !! Result
! Converting !! Result
|-
|-
Line 297: Line 578:
|0.4 × 2 = '''0.8''' < 1 || 0.000
|0.4 × 2 = '''0.8''' < 1 || 0.000
|-
|-
|0.8 × 2 = '''1.6''' &ge; 1 || 0.0001
|0.8 × 2 = '''1.6''' 1 || 0.0001
|-
|-
|0.6 × 2 = '''1.2''' &ge; 1 || 0.00011
|0.6 × 2 = '''1.2''' 1 || 0.00011
|-
|-
|0.2 × 2 = '''0.4''' < 1 || 0.000110
|0.2 × 2 = '''0.4''' < 1 || 0.000110
Line 305: Line 586:
|0.4 × 2 = '''0.8''' < 1 || 0.0001100
|0.4 × 2 = '''0.8''' < 1 || 0.0001100
|-
|-
|0.8 × 2 = '''1.6''' &ge; 1 || 0.00011001
|0.8 × 2 = '''1.6''' 1 || 0.00011001
|-
|-
|0.6 × 2 = '''1.2''' &ge; 1 || 0.000110011
|0.6 × 2 = '''1.2''' 1 || 0.000110011
|-
|-
|0.2 × 2 = '''0.4''' < 1 || 0.0001100110
|0.2 × 2 = '''0.4''' < 1 || 0.0001100110
|}
|}


This is also a repeating binary fraction 0.00011{{overline|0011}}... . It may come as a surprise that terminating decimal fractions can have repeating expansions in binary. It is for this reason that many are surprised to discover that 0.1 + ... + 0.1, (10 additions) differs from 1 in floating point arithmetic. In fact, the only binary fractions with terminating expansions are of the form of an integer divided by a power of 2, which 1/10 is not.
This is also a repeating binary fraction 0.0{{overline|0011}}... . It may come as a surprise that terminating decimal fractions can have repeating expansions in binary. It is for this reason that many are surprised to discover that 1/10 + ... + 1/10 (addition of 10 numbers) differs from 1 in binary [[floating point arithmetic]]. In fact, the only binary fractions with terminating expansions are of the form of an integer divided by a power of 2, which 1/10 is not.


The final conversion is from binary to decimal fractions. The only difficulty arises with repeating fractions, but otherwise the method is to shift the fraction to an integer, convert it as above, and then divide by the appropriate power of two in the decimal base. For example:
The final conversion is from binary to decimal fractions. The only difficulty arises with repeating fractions, but otherwise the method is to shift the fraction to an integer, convert it as above, and then divide by the appropriate power of two in the decimal base. For example:


<math display="block">\begin{align}
:{|
x & = & 1100&.1\overline{01110}\ldots \\
| <math>x</math> ||align="right"|= ||align="right"|'''1100''' ||align="left"|'''.1011100{{overline|11100}}...'''
x\times 2^6 & = & 1100101110&.\overline{01110}\ldots \\
|-
x\times 2 & = & 11001&.\overline{01110}\ldots \\
| <math>x \times 2^6</math> ||align="right"|= ||align="right"|'''1100101110'''||align="left"|'''.01110{{overline|01110}}...'''
x\times(2^6-2) & = & 1100010101 \\
|-
x & = & 1100010101/111110 \\
| <math>x \times 2</math> ||align="right"|= ||align="right"|'''11001''' ||align="left"|'''.01110{{overline|01110}}...'''
x & = & (789/62)_{10}
|-
\end{align}</math>
| <math>x \times (2^6 - 2)</math> ||align="right"|= ||align="right"|'''1100010101'''
|-
|-
| <math>x</math> ||align="right"|= ||align="right"|(789/62)<sub>10</sub>
|}


Another way of converting from binary to decimal, often quicker for a person familiar with [[hexadecimal]], is to do so indirectly&mdash;first converting (<math>x</math> in binary) into (<math>x</math> in hexadecimal) and then converting (<math>x</math> in hexadecimal) into (<math>x</math> in decimal).
Another way of converting from binary to decimal, often quicker for a person familiar with [[hexadecimal]], is to do so indirectly—first converting (<math>x</math> in binary) into (<math>x</math> in hexadecimal) and then converting (<math>x</math> in hexadecimal) into (<math>x</math> in decimal).


For very large numbers, these simple methods are inefficient because they perform a large number of multiplications or divisions where one operand is very large. A simple divide-and-conquer algorithm is more effective asymptotically: given a binary number, it is divided by 10<sup>''k''</sup>, where ''k'' is chosen so that the quotient roughly equals the remainder; then each of these pieces is converted to decimal and the two are [[Concatenation|concatenated]]. Given a decimal number, it can be split into two pieces of about the same size, each of which is converted to binary, whereupon the first converted piece is multiplied by 10<sup>''k''</sup> and added to the second converted piece, where ''k'' is the number of decimal digits in the second, least-significant piece before conversion.
=== Hexadecimal ===


===Hexadecimal===
Binary may be converted to and from [[hexadecimal]] somewhat more easily. This is due to the fact that the [[radix]] of the hexadecimal system (16) is a power of the radix of the binary system (2). More specifically, 16 = 2<sup>4</sup>, so it takes four digits of binary to represent one digit of hexadecimal.
{{Main|Hexadecimal}}

{{Hexadecimal table}}
The following table shows each hexadecimal digit along with the equivalent decimal value and four-digit binary sequence:
Binary may be converted to and from hexadecimal more easily. This is because the [[radix]] of the hexadecimal system (16) is a power of the radix of the binary system (2). More specifically, 16 = 2<sup>4</sup>, so it takes four digits of binary to represent one digit of hexadecimal, as shown in the adjacent table.

{| border=0 cellpadding="8" cellspacing="0"
|
{| class="wikitable"
!Hex!!Dec!!Binary
|-align=center
|0||0||0000
|-align=center
|1||1||0001
|-align=center
|2||2||0010
|-align=center
|3||3||0011
|}
|
{| class="wikitable"
!Hex!!Dec!!Binary
|-align=center
|4||4||0100
|-align=center
|5||5||0101
|-align=center
|6||6||0110
|-align=center
|7||7||0111
|}
|
{| class="wikitable"
!Hex!!Dec!!Binary
|-align=center
|8||8||1000
|-align=center
|9||9||1001
|-align=center
|A||10||1010
|-align=center
|B||11||1011
|}
|
{| class="wikitable"
!Hex!!Dec!!Binary
|-align=center
|C||12||1100
|-align=center
|D||13||1101
|-align=center
|E||14||1110
|-align=center
|F||15||1111
|}
|}


To convert a hexadecimal number into its binary equivalent, simply substitute the corresponding binary digits:
To convert a hexadecimal number into its binary equivalent, simply substitute the corresponding binary digits:
Line 393: Line 620:
:E7<sub>16</sub> = 1110 0111<sub>2</sub>
:E7<sub>16</sub> = 1110 0111<sub>2</sub>


To convert a binary number into its hexadecimal equivalent, divide it into groups of four bits. If the number of bits isn't a multiple of four, simply insert extra '''0''' bits at the left (called [[padding]]). For example:
To convert a binary number into its hexadecimal equivalent, divide it into groups of four bits. If the number of bits isn't a multiple of four, simply insert extra '''0''' bits at the left (called [[Padding (cryptography)#Bit padding|padding]]). For example:


:1010010<sub>2</sub> = 0101 0010 grouped with padding = 52<sub>16</sub>
:1010010<sub>2</sub> = 0101 0010 grouped with padding = 52<sub>16</sub>
Line 402: Line 629:
:C0E7<sub>16</sub> = (12 × 16<sup>3</sup>) + (0 × 16<sup>2</sup>) + (14 × 16<sup>1</sup>) + (7 × 16<sup>0</sup>) = (12 × 4096) + (0 × 256) + (14 × 16) + (7 × 1) = 49,383<sub>10</sub>
:C0E7<sub>16</sub> = (12 × 16<sup>3</sup>) + (0 × 16<sup>2</sup>) + (14 × 16<sup>1</sup>) + (7 × 16<sup>0</sup>) = (12 × 4096) + (0 × 256) + (14 × 16) + (7 × 1) = 49,383<sub>10</sub>


===Octal===
{{Main|Octal}}
Binary is also easily converted to the [[octal]] numeral system, since octal uses a radix of 8, which is a [[power of two]] (namely, 2<sup>3</sup>, so it takes exactly three binary digits to represent an octal digit). The correspondence between octal and binary numerals is the same as for the first eight digits of [[hexadecimal]] in the table above. Binary 000 is equivalent to the octal digit 0, binary 111 is equivalent to octal 7, and so forth.

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
!Octal!!Binary
|-
| 0 || 000
|-
| 1 || 001
|-
| 2 || 010
|-
| 3 || 011
|-
| 4 || 100
|-
| 5 || 101
|-
| 6 || 110
|-
| 7 || 111
|}

Converting from octal to binary proceeds in the same fashion as it does for [[hexadecimal]]:

:65<sub>8</sub> = 110 101<sub>2</sub>
:17<sub>8</sub> = 001 111<sub>2</sub>

And from binary to octal:

:101100<sub>2</sub> = 101 100<sub>2</sub> grouped = 54<sub>8</sub>
:10011<sub>2</sub> = 010 011<sub>2</sub> grouped with padding = 23<sub>8</sub>


And from octal to decimal:


:65<sub>8</sub> = (6 × 8<sup>1</sup>) + (5 × 8<sup>0</sup>) = (6 × 8) + (5 × 1) = 53<sub>10</sub>
== Representing real numbers ==
:127<sub>8</sub> = (1 × 8<sup>2</sup>) + (2 × 8<sup>1</sup>) + (7 × 8<sup>0</sup>) = (1 × 64) + (2 × 8) + (7 × 1) = 87<sub>10</sub>


==Representing real numbers==
Non-integers can be represented by using negative powers, which are set off from the other digits by means of a [[radix point]] (called a [[decimal point]] in the decimal system). For example, the binary number 11.01<sub>2</sub> thus means:
<!-- This section is linked from [[Chaitin's constant]] -->
Non-integers can be represented by using negative powers, which are set off from the other digits by means of a [[radix point]] (called a [[decimal point]] in the decimal system). For example, the binary number 11.01<sub>2</sub> means:


:{|
{|
|'''1''' × 2<sup>1</sup> || (1 × 2 = '''2''') || plus
|'''1''' × 2<sup>1</sup> || (1 × 2 = '''2''') || plus
|-
|-
|'''1''' × 2<sup>0</sup> || (1 × 1 = '''1''') || plus
|'''1''' × 2<sup>0</sup> || (1 × 1 = '''1''') || plus
|-
|-
|'''0''' × 2<sup>-1</sup> || (0 × &frac12; = '''0''') || plus
|'''0''' × 2<sup>−1</sup> || (0 × {{frac|2}} = '''0''') || plus
|-
|-
|'''1''' × 2<sup>-2</sup> || (1 × &frac14; = '''0.25''')
|'''1''' × 2<sup>−2</sup> || (1 × {{frac|4}} = '''0.25''')
|}
|}


For a total of 3.25 decimal.
For a total of 3.25 decimal.


All [[dyadic fraction|dyadic rational number]]s <math>\frac{p}{2^a}</math> have a ''terminating'' binary numeral&mdash;the binary representation has a finite number of terms after the radix point. Other [[rational number]]s have binary representation, but instead of terminating, they ''recur'', with a finite sequence of digits repeating indefinitely. For instance
All [[dyadic fraction|dyadic rational numbers]] <math>\frac{p}{2^a}</math> have a ''terminating'' binary numeral—the binary representation has a finite number of terms after the radix point. Other [[rational numbers]] have binary representation, but instead of terminating, they ''recur'', with a finite sequence of digits repeating indefinitely. For instance


:<math>\frac{1_{10}}{3_{10}}</math> = <math>\frac{1_2}{11_2}</math> = 0.01010101{{overline|01}}...<sub>2</sub>
<math display="block">\frac{1_{10}}{3_{10}} = \frac{1_2}{11_2} = 0.01010101\overline{01}\ldots\,_2 </math>
<math display="block">\frac{12_{10}}{17_{10}} = \frac{1100_2}{10001_2} = 0.10110100 10110100\overline{10110100}\ldots\,_2 </math>


The phenomenon that the binary representation of any rational is either terminating or recurring also occurs in other radix-based numeral systems. See, for instance, the explanation in [[decimal]]. Another similarity is the existence of alternative representations for any terminating representation, relying on the fact that [[0.111... = 1 (binary)|0.111111...]] is the sum of the [[geometric series]] 2<sup>−1</sup> + 2<sup>−2</sup> + 2<sup>−3</sup> + ... which is 1.


Binary numerals that neither terminate nor recur represent [[irrational number]]s. For instance,
:<math>\frac{12_{10}}{17_{10}}</math> = <math>\frac{1100_2}{10001_2}</math> = 0.10110100 10110100 {{overline|10110100}}...<sub>2</sub>
* 0.10100100010000100000100... does have a pattern, but it is not a fixed-length recurring pattern, so the number is irrational
* 1.0110101000001001111001100110011111110... is the binary representation of <math>\sqrt{2}</math>, the [[square root of 2]], another irrational. It has no discernible pattern.


==See also==
The phenomenon that the binary representation of any rational is either terminating or recurring also occurs in other radix-based numeral systems. See, for instance, the explanation in [[decimal]]. Another similarity is the existence of alternative representations for any terminating representation, relying on the fact that 0.111111... is the sum of the [[geometric series]] 2<sup>-1</sup> + 2<sup>-2</sup> + 2<sup>-3</sup> + ... which is 1.
{{Portal|Mathematics}}

* [[ASCII]]
Binary numerals which neither terminate nor recur represent [[irrational number]]s. For instance,
* [[Balanced ternary]]
* 0.10100100010000100000100.... does have a pattern, but it is not a fixed-length recurring pattern, so the number is irrational
* [[Bitwise operation]]
* 1.0110101000001001111001100110011111110... is the binary representation of <math>\sqrt{2}</math>, the [[square root]] of 2, another irrational. It has no discernible pattern, although a proof that <math>\sqrt{2}</math> is irrational requires more than this. See [[irrational number]].
* [[Binary code]]
* [[Binary-coded decimal]]
* [[Finger binary]]
* [[Gray code]]
* [[IEEE 754]]
* [[Linear-feedback shift register]]
* [[Offset binary]]
* [[Quibinary]]
* [[Reduction of summands]]
* [[Redundant binary representation]]
* [[Repeating decimal]]
* [[Two's complement]]
* [[Unicode]]


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
<references/>
{{Wikibooks|Fractals/Mathematics/binary}}
<!--=========================================================


There are MANY web pages devoted to binary numbers. This section should not be a repository of such web pages.
==See also==
Before adding another external link here, make sure it provides a unique resource beyond what is already here.
*[[Two's complement]]
We do not need yet another explanation of the binary number system.
*[[Finger binary]]
*[[Binary-coded decimal]]


======
== External links ==
======
* [http://www.BinaryMath.info BinaryMath.info - Binary arithmetic, conversion tools, and exercises]
======
* [http://www.swansontec.com/sbinary.htm Introduction to Binary Numbers]
======
* [http://www.kerryr.net/pioneers/leibniz.htm A brief overview of Leibniz and the connection to binary numbers]
========
* [http://www.insidereality.net/site/content/math/base_conversion.php Simple Conversion Methods]
-->
{{Commons category|Binary numeral system}}
* [http://www.cut-the-knot.org/do_you_know/BinaryHistory.shtml Binary System] at [[cut-the-knot]]
* [http://www.cut-the-knot.org/do_you_know/BinaryHistory.shtml Binary System] at [[cut-the-knot]]
* [http://www.cut-the-knot.org/blue/frac_conv.shtml Conversion of Fractions] at [[cut-the-knot]]
* [http://www.cut-the-knot.org/blue/frac_conv.shtml Conversion of Fractions] at [[cut-the-knot]]
* Sir Francis Bacon's BiLiteral Cypher system {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160923014940/http://www.baconlinks.com/docs/BILITERAL.doc |date=23 September 2016 }}, predates binary number system.
* [http://www.mathsisfun.com/binary-digits.html Binary Digits] at [[Math Is Fun]]
* [http://www.wikihow.com/Convert-from-Decimal-to-Binary How to Convert from Decimal to Binary] at [[wikiHow]]
* [http://www.jorgepena.be/binary-and-hexadecimal/ Binary and Hexadecimal Tutorial]
* [http://courses.cs.vt.edu/~csonline/NumberSystems/Lessons/BinaryNumbers/index.html Binary Numbers] course module at [[Virginia Tech]]


{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Binary arithmetic]]
[[Category:Computer arithmetic]]
[[Category:Computer arithmetic]]
[[Category:Elementary arithmetic]]
[[Category:Elementary arithmetic]]
[[Category:Positional numeral systems| 2]]
[[Category:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]]
[[Category:Power-of-two numeral systems]]

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[[et:Kahendsüsteem]]
[[el:Δυαδικό σύστημα]]
[[es:Sistema binario]]
[[eo:Duuma sistemo]]
[[eu:Zenbaki-sistema bitar]]
[[fa:دستگاه اعداد دودویی]]
[[fr:Système binaire]]
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[[he:בסיס בינארי]]
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[[ja:二進記数法]]
[[no:Binært tallsystem]]
[[nn:Totalssystemet]]
[[pl:Dwójkowy system liczbowy]]
[[pt:Sistema binário (matemática)]]
[[ro:Sistem binar]]
[[ru:Двоичная система счисления]]
[[simple:Binary numeral system]]
[[sk:Dvojková číselná sústava]]
[[sl:Dvojiški številski sistem]]
[[sr:Бинарни систем]]
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[[vls:Binair reekn'n]]
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[[zh:二进制]]

Latest revision as of 02:22, 25 December 2024

A binary number is a number expressed in the base-2 numeral system or binary numeral system, a method for representing numbers that uses only two symbols for the natural numbers: typically "0" (zero) and "1" (one). A binary number may also refer to a rational number that has a finite representation in the binary numeral system, that is, the quotient of an integer by a power of two.

The base-2 numeral system is a positional notation with a radix of 2. Each digit is referred to as bit, or binary digit. Because of its straightforward implementation in digital electronic circuitry using logic gates, the binary system is used by almost all modern computers and computer-based devices, as a preferred system of use, over various other human techniques of communication, because of the simplicity of the language and the noise immunity in physical implementation.[1]

History

[edit]

The modern binary number system was studied in Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries by Thomas Harriot, Gottfried Leibniz. However, systems related to binary numbers have appeared earlier in multiple cultures including ancient Egypt, China, and India.

Egypt

[edit]
Arithmetic values thought to have been represented by parts of the Eye of Horus

The scribes of ancient Egypt used two different systems for their fractions, Egyptian fractions (not related to the binary number system) and Horus-Eye fractions (so called because many historians of mathematics believe that the symbols used for this system could be arranged to form the eye of Horus, although this has been disputed).[2] Horus-Eye fractions are a binary numbering system for fractional quantities of grain, liquids, or other measures, in which a fraction of a hekat is expressed as a sum of the binary fractions 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, 1/16, 1/32, and 1/64. Early forms of this system can be found in documents from the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt, approximately 2400 BC, and its fully developed hieroglyphic form dates to the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt, approximately 1200 BC.[3]

The method used for ancient Egyptian multiplication is also closely related to binary numbers. In this method, multiplying one number by a second is performed by a sequence of steps in which a value (initially the first of the two numbers) is either doubled or has the first number added back into it; the order in which these steps are to be performed is given by the binary representation of the second number. This method can be seen in use, for instance, in the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, which dates to around 1650 BC.[4]

China

[edit]
Daoist Bagua

The I Ching dates from the 9th century BC in China.[5] The binary notation in the I Ching is used to interpret its quaternary divination technique.[6]

It is based on taoistic duality of yin and yang.[7] Eight trigrams (Bagua) and a set of 64 hexagrams ("sixty-four" gua), analogous to the three-bit and six-bit binary numerals, were in use at least as early as the Zhou dynasty of ancient China.[5]

The Song dynasty scholar Shao Yong (1011–1077) rearranged the hexagrams in a format that resembles modern binary numbers, although he did not intend his arrangement to be used mathematically.[6] Viewing the least significant bit on top of single hexagrams in Shao Yong's square[8] and reading along rows either from bottom right to top left with solid lines as 0 and broken lines as 1 or from top left to bottom right with solid lines as 1 and broken lines as 0 hexagrams can be interpreted as sequence from 0 to 63. [9]

Classical antiquity

[edit]

Etruscans divided the outer edge of divination livers into sixteen parts, each inscribed with the name of a divinity and its region of the sky. Each liver region produced a binary reading which was combined into a final binary for divination.[10]

Divination at Ancient Greek Dodona oracle worked by drawing from separate jars, questions tablets and "yes" and "no" pellets. The result was then combined to make a final prophecy.[11]

India

[edit]

The Indian scholar Pingala (c. 2nd century BC) developed a binary system for describing prosody.[12][13] He described meters in the form of short and long syllables (the latter equal in length to two short syllables).[14] They were known as laghu (light) and guru (heavy) syllables.

Pingala's Hindu classic titled Chandaḥśāstra (8.23) describes the formation of a matrix in order to give a unique value to each meter. "Chandaḥśāstra" literally translates to science of meters in Sanskrit. The binary representations in Pingala's system increases towards the right, and not to the left like in the binary numbers of the modern positional notation.[15] In Pingala's system, the numbers start from number one, and not zero. Four short syllables "0000" is the first pattern and corresponds to the value one. The numerical value is obtained by adding one to the sum of place values.[16]

Africa

[edit]

The Ifá is an African divination system. Similar to the I Ching, but has up to 256 binary signs,[17] unlike the I Ching which has 64. The Ifá originated in 15th century West Africa among Yoruba people. In 2008, UNESCO added Ifá to its list of the "Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity".[18][19]

Other cultures

[edit]

The residents of the island of Mangareva in French Polynesia were using a hybrid binary-decimal system before 1450.[20] Slit drums with binary tones are used to encode messages across Africa and Asia.[7] Sets of binary combinations similar to the I Ching have also been used in traditional African divination systems, such as Ifá among others, as well as in medieval Western geomancy. The majority of Indigenous Australian languages use a base-2 system.[21]

Western predecessors to Leibniz

[edit]

In the late 13th century Ramon Llull had the ambition to account for all wisdom in every branch of human knowledge of the time. For that purpose he developed a general method or "Ars generalis" based on binary combinations of a number of simple basic principles or categories, for which he has been considered a predecessor of computing science and artificial intelligence.[22]

In 1605, Francis Bacon discussed a system whereby letters of the alphabet could be reduced to sequences of binary digits, which could then be encoded as scarcely visible variations in the font in any random text.[23] Importantly for the general theory of binary encoding, he added that this method could be used with any objects at all: "provided those objects be capable of a twofold difference only; as by Bells, by Trumpets, by Lights and Torches, by the report of Muskets, and any instruments of like nature".[23] (See Bacon's cipher.)

In 1617, John Napier described a system he called location arithmetic for doing binary calculations using a non-positional representation by letters. Thomas Harriot investigated several positional numbering systems, including binary, but did not publish his results; they were found later among his papers.[24] Possibly the first publication of the system in Europe was by Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz, in 1700.[25]

Leibniz

[edit]
Gottfried Leibniz

Leibniz wrote in excess of a hundred manuscripts on binary, most of them remaining unpublished. [26] Before his first dedicated work in 1679, numerous manuscripts feature early attempts to explore binary concepts, including tables of numbers and basic calculations, often scribbled in the margins of works unrelated to mathematics.[26]

His first known work on binary, “On the Binary Progression", in 1679, Leibniz introduced conversion between decimal and binary, along with algorithms for performing basic arithmetic operations such as addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division using binary numbers. He also developed a form of binary algebra to calculate the square of a six-digit number and to extract square roots.[26]

His most well known work appears in his article Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire (published in 1703). The full title of Leibniz's article is translated into English as the "Explanation of Binary Arithmetic, which uses only the characters 1 and 0, with some remarks on its usefulness, and on the light it throws on the ancient Chinese figures of Fu Xi".[27] Leibniz's system uses 0 and 1, like the modern binary numeral system. An example of Leibniz's binary numeral system is as follows:[27]

0 0 0 1   numerical value 20
0 0 1 0   numerical value 21
0 1 0 0   numerical value 22
1 0 0 0   numerical value 23

While corresponding with the Jesuit priest Joachim Bouvet in 1700, who had made himself an expert on the I Ching while a missionary in China, Leibniz explained his binary notation, and Bouvet demonstrated in his 1701 letters that the I Ching was an independent, parallel invention of binary notation. Leibniz & Bouvet concluded that this mapping was evidence of major Chinese accomplishments in the sort of philosophical mathematics he admired.[28] Of this parallel invention, Leibniz wrote in his "Explanation Of Binary Arithmetic" that "this restitution of their meaning, after such a great interval of time, will seem all the more curious."[29]

The relation was a central idea to his universal concept of a language or characteristica universalis, a popular idea that would be followed closely by his successors such as Gottlob Frege and George Boole in forming modern symbolic logic.[30] Leibniz was first introduced to the I Ching through his contact with the French Jesuit Joachim Bouvet, who visited China in 1685 as a missionary. Leibniz saw the I Ching hexagrams as an affirmation of the universality of his own religious beliefs as a Christian.[31] Binary numerals were central to Leibniz's theology. He believed that binary numbers were symbolic of the Christian idea of creatio ex nihilo or creation out of nothing.[32]

[A concept that] is not easy to impart to the pagans, is the creation ex nihilo through God's almighty power. Now one can say that nothing in the world can better present and demonstrate this power than the origin of numbers, as it is presented here through the simple and unadorned presentation of One and Zero or Nothing.

— Leibniz's letter to the Duke of Brunswick attached with the I Ching hexagrams[31]

Later developments

[edit]
George Boole

In 1854, British mathematician George Boole published a landmark paper detailing an algebraic system of logic that would become known as Boolean algebra. His logical calculus was to become instrumental in the design of digital electronic circuitry.[33]

In 1937, Claude Shannon produced his master's thesis at MIT that implemented Boolean algebra and binary arithmetic using electronic relays and switches for the first time in history. Entitled A Symbolic Analysis of Relay and Switching Circuits, Shannon's thesis essentially founded practical digital circuit design.[34]

In November 1937, George Stibitz, then working at Bell Labs, completed a relay-based computer he dubbed the "Model K" (for "Kitchen", where he had assembled it), which calculated using binary addition.[35] Bell Labs authorized a full research program in late 1938 with Stibitz at the helm. Their Complex Number Computer, completed 8 January 1940, was able to calculate complex numbers. In a demonstration to the American Mathematical Society conference at Dartmouth College on 11 September 1940, Stibitz was able to send the Complex Number Calculator remote commands over telephone lines by a teletype. It was the first computing machine ever used remotely over a phone line. Some participants of the conference who witnessed the demonstration were John von Neumann, John Mauchly and Norbert Wiener, who wrote about it in his memoirs.[36][37][38]

The Z1 computer, which was designed and built by Konrad Zuse between 1935 and 1938, used Boolean logic and binary floating-point numbers.[39]

Representation

[edit]

Any number can be represented by a sequence of bits (binary digits), which in turn may be represented by any mechanism capable of being in two mutually exclusive states. Any of the following rows of symbols can be interpreted as the binary numeric value of 667:

1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1
| | | | | |
y n y n n y y n y y
T F T F F T T F T T
A binary clock might use LEDs to express binary values. In this clock, each column of LEDs shows a binary-coded decimal numeral of the traditional sexagesimal time.

The numeric value represented in each case depends on the value assigned to each symbol. In the earlier days of computing, switches, punched holes, and punched paper tapes were used to represent binary values.[40] In a modern computer, the numeric values may be represented by two different voltages; on a magnetic disk, magnetic polarities may be used. A "positive", "yes", or "on" state is not necessarily equivalent to the numerical value of one; it depends on the architecture in use.

In keeping with the customary representation of numerals using Arabic numerals, binary numbers are commonly written using the symbols 0 and 1. When written, binary numerals are often subscripted, prefixed, or suffixed to indicate their base, or radix. The following notations are equivalent:

  • 100101 binary (explicit statement of format)
  • 100101b (a suffix indicating binary format; also known as Intel convention[41][42])
  • 100101B (a suffix indicating binary format)
  • bin 100101 (a prefix indicating binary format)
  • 1001012 (a subscript indicating base-2 (binary) notation)
  • %100101 (a prefix indicating binary format; also known as Motorola convention[41][42])
  • 0b100101 (a prefix indicating binary format, common in programming languages)
  • 6b100101 (a prefix indicating number of bits in binary format, common in programming languages)
  • #b100101 (a prefix indicating binary format, common in Lisp programming languages)

When spoken, binary numerals are usually read digit-by-digit, to distinguish them from decimal numerals. For example, the binary numeral 100 is pronounced one zero zero, rather than one hundred, to make its binary nature explicit and for purposes of correctness. Since the binary numeral 100 represents the value four, it would be confusing to refer to the numeral as one hundred (a word that represents a completely different value, or amount). Alternatively, the binary numeral 100 can be read out as "four" (the correct value), but this does not make its binary nature explicit.

Counting in binary

[edit]
Decimal
number
Binary
number
0 0
1 1
2 10
3 11
4 100
5 101
6 110
7 111
8 1000
9 1001
10 1010
11 1011
12 1100
13 1101
14 1110
15 1111

Counting in binary is similar to counting in any other number system. Beginning with a single digit, counting proceeds through each symbol, in increasing order. Before examining binary counting, it is useful to briefly discuss the more familiar decimal counting system as a frame of reference.

Decimal counting

[edit]

Decimal counting uses the ten symbols 0 through 9. Counting begins with the incremental substitution of the least significant digit (rightmost digit) which is often called the first digit. When the available symbols for this position are exhausted, the least significant digit is reset to 0, and the next digit of higher significance (one position to the left) is incremented (overflow), and incremental substitution of the low-order digit resumes. This method of reset and overflow is repeated for each digit of significance. Counting progresses as follows:

000, 001, 002, ... 007, 008, 009, (rightmost digit is reset to zero, and the digit to its left is incremented)
010, 011, 012, ...
   ...
090, 091, 092, ... 097, 098, 099, (rightmost two digits are reset to zeroes, and next digit is incremented)
100, 101, 102, ...

Binary counting

[edit]
This counter shows how to count in binary from numbers zero through thirty-one.
A party trick to guess a number from which cards it is printed on uses the bits of the binary representation of the number. In the SVG file, click a card to toggle it

Binary counting follows the exact same procedure, and again the incremental substitution begins with the least significant binary digit, or bit (the rightmost one, also called the first bit), except that only the two symbols 0 and 1 are available. Thus, after a bit reaches 1 in binary, an increment resets it to 0 but also causes an increment of the next bit to the left:

0000,
0001, (rightmost bit starts over, and the next bit is incremented)
0010, 0011, (rightmost two bits start over, and the next bit is incremented)
0100, 0101, 0110, 0111, (rightmost three bits start over, and the next bit is incremented)
1000, 1001, 1010, 1011, 1100, 1101, 1110, 1111 ...

In the binary system, each bit represents an increasing power of 2, with the rightmost bit representing 20, the next representing 21, then 22, and so on. The value of a binary number is the sum of the powers of 2 represented by each "1" bit. For example, the binary number 100101 is converted to decimal form as follows:

1001012 = [ ( 1 ) × 25 ] + [ ( 0 ) × 24 ] + [ ( 0 ) × 23 ] + [ ( 1 ) × 22 ] + [ ( 0 ) × 21 ] + [ ( 1 ) × 20 ]
1001012 = [ 1 × 32 ] + [ 0 × 16 ] + [ 0 × 8 ] + [ 1 × 4 ] + [ 0 × 2 ] + [ 1 × 1 ]
1001012 = 3710

Fractions

[edit]

Fractions in binary arithmetic terminate only if the denominator is a power of 2. As a result, 1/10 does not have a finite binary representation (10 has prime factors 2 and 5). This causes 10 × 1/10 not to precisely equal 1 in binary floating-point arithmetic. As an example, to interpret the binary expression for 1/3 = .010101..., this means: 1/3 = 0 × 2−1 + 1 × 2−2 + 0 × 2−3 + 1 × 2−4 + ... = 0.3125 + ... An exact value cannot be found with a sum of a finite number of inverse powers of two, the zeros and ones in the binary representation of 1/3 alternate forever.

Fraction Decimal Binary Fractional approximation
1/1 1 or 0.999... 1 or 0.1 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/8...
1/2 0.5 or 0.4999... 0.1 or 0.01 1/4 + 1/8 + 1/16 . . .
1/3 0.333... 0.01 1/4 + 1/16 + 1/64 . . .
1/4 0.25 or 0.24999... 0.01 or 0.001 1/8 + 1/16 + 1/32 . . .
1/5 0.2 or 0.1999... 0.0011 1/8 + 1/16 + 1/128 . . .
1/6 0.1666... 0.001 1/8 + 1/32 + 1/128 . . .
1/7 0.142857142857... 0.001 1/8 + 1/64 + 1/512 . . .
1/8 0.125 or 0.124999... 0.001 or 0.0001 1/16 + 1/32 + 1/64 . . .
1/9 0.111... 0.000111 1/16 + 1/32 + 1/64 . . .
1/10 0.1 or 0.0999... 0.00011 1/16 + 1/32 + 1/256 . . .
1/11 0.090909... 0.0001011101 1/16 + 1/64 + 1/128 . . .
1/12 0.08333... 0.0001 1/16 + 1/64 + 1/256 . . .
1/13 0.076923076923... 0.000100111011 1/16 + 1/128 + 1/256 . . .
1/14 0.0714285714285... 0.0001 1/16 + 1/128 + 1/1024 . . .
1/15 0.0666... 0.0001 1/16 + 1/256 . . .
1/16 0.0625 or 0.0624999... 0.0001 or 0.00001 1/32 + 1/64 + 1/128 . . .

Binary arithmetic

[edit]

Arithmetic in binary is much like arithmetic in other positional notation numeral systems. Addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division can be performed on binary numerals.

Addition

[edit]
The circuit diagram for a binary half adder, which adds two bits together, producing sum and carry bits

The simplest arithmetic operation in binary is addition. Adding two single-digit binary numbers is relatively simple, using a form of carrying:

0 + 0 → 0
0 + 1 → 1
1 + 0 → 1
1 + 1 → 0, carry 1 (since 1 + 1 = 2 = 0 + (1 × 21) )

Adding two "1" digits produces a digit "0", while 1 will have to be added to the next column. This is similar to what happens in decimal when certain single-digit numbers are added together; if the result equals or exceeds the value of the radix (10), the digit to the left is incremented:

5 + 5 → 0, carry 1 (since 5 + 5 = 10 = 0 + (1 × 101) )
7 + 9 → 6, carry 1 (since 7 + 9 = 16 = 6 + (1 × 101) )

This is known as carrying. When the result of an addition exceeds the value of a digit, the procedure is to "carry" the excess amount divided by the radix (that is, 10/10) to the left, adding it to the next positional value. This is correct since the next position has a weight that is higher by a factor equal to the radix. Carrying works the same way in binary:

  1 1 1 1 1    (carried digits)
    0 1 1 0 1
+   1 0 1 1 1
-------------
= 1 0 0 1 0 0 = 36

In this example, two numerals are being added together: 011012 (1310) and 101112 (2310). The top row shows the carry bits used. Starting in the rightmost column, 1 + 1 = 102. The 1 is carried to the left, and the 0 is written at the bottom of the rightmost column. The second column from the right is added: 1 + 0 + 1 = 102 again; the 1 is carried, and 0 is written at the bottom. The third column: 1 + 1 + 1 = 112. This time, a 1 is carried, and a 1 is written in the bottom row. Proceeding like this gives the final answer 1001002 (3610).

When computers must add two numbers, the rule that: x xor y = (x + y) mod 2 for any two bits x and y allows for very fast calculation, as well.

Long carry method

[edit]

A simplification for many binary addition problems is the "long carry method" or "Brookhouse Method of Binary Addition". This method is particularly useful when one of the numbers contains a long stretch of ones. It is based on the simple premise that under the binary system, when given a stretch of digits composed entirely of n ones (where n is any integer length), adding 1 will result in the number 1 followed by a string of n zeros. That concept follows, logically, just as in the decimal system, where adding 1 to a string of n 9s will result in the number 1 followed by a string of n 0s:

     Binary                        Decimal
    1 1 1 1 1     likewise        9 9 9 9 9
 +          1                  +          1
  ———————————                   ———————————
  1 0 0 0 0 0                   1 0 0 0 0 0

Such long strings are quite common in the binary system. From that one finds that large binary numbers can be added using two simple steps, without excessive carry operations. In the following example, two numerals are being added together: 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 02 (95810) and 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 12 (69110), using the traditional carry method on the left, and the long carry method on the right:

Traditional Carry Method                       Long Carry Method
                                vs.
  1 1 1   1 1 1 1 1      (carried digits)   1 ←     1 ←            carry the 1 until it is one digit past the "string" below
    1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0                       1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0  cross out the "string",
+   1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1                   +   1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1  and cross out the digit that was added to it
———————————————————————                    ——————————————————————
= 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1                     1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1

The top row shows the carry bits used. Instead of the standard carry from one column to the next, the lowest-ordered "1" with a "1" in the corresponding place value beneath it may be added and a "1" may be carried to one digit past the end of the series. The "used" numbers must be crossed off, since they are already added. Other long strings may likewise be cancelled using the same technique. Then, simply add together any remaining digits normally. Proceeding in this manner gives the final answer of 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 12 (164910). In our simple example using small numbers, the traditional carry method required eight carry operations, yet the long carry method required only two, representing a substantial reduction of effort.

Addition table

[edit]
0 1
0 0 1
1 1 10

The binary addition table is similar to, but not the same as, the truth table of the logical disjunction operation . The difference is that , while .

Subtraction

[edit]

Subtraction works in much the same way:

0 − 0 → 0
0 − 1 → 1, borrow 1
1 − 0 → 1
1 − 1 → 0

Subtracting a "1" digit from a "0" digit produces the digit "1", while 1 will have to be subtracted from the next column. This is known as borrowing. The principle is the same as for carrying. When the result of a subtraction is less than 0, the least possible value of a digit, the procedure is to "borrow" the deficit divided by the radix (that is, 10/10) from the left, subtracting it from the next positional value.

    *   * * *   (starred columns are borrowed from)
  1 1 0 1 1 1 0
−     1 0 1 1 1
----------------
= 1 0 1 0 1 1 1
  *             (starred columns are borrowed from)
  1 0 1 1 1 1 1
–   1 0 1 0 1 1
----------------
= 0 1 1 0 1 0 0

Subtracting a positive number is equivalent to adding a negative number of equal absolute value. Computers use signed number representations to handle negative numbers—most commonly the two's complement notation. Such representations eliminate the need for a separate "subtract" operation. Using two's complement notation, subtraction can be summarized by the following formula:

A − B = A + not B + 1

Multiplication

[edit]

Multiplication in binary is similar to its decimal counterpart. Two numbers A and B can be multiplied by partial products: for each digit in B, the product of that digit in A is calculated and written on a new line, shifted leftward so that its rightmost digit lines up with the digit in B that was used. The sum of all these partial products gives the final result.

Since there are only two digits in binary, there are only two possible outcomes of each partial multiplication:

  • If the digit in B is 0, the partial product is also 0
  • If the digit in B is 1, the partial product is equal to A

For example, the binary numbers 1011 and 1010 are multiplied as follows:

           1 0 1 1   (A)
         × 1 0 1 0   (B)
         ---------
           0 0 0 0   ← Corresponds to the rightmost 'zero' in B
   +     1 0 1 1     ← Corresponds to the next 'one' in B
   +   0 0 0 0
   + 1 0 1 1
   ---------------
   = 1 1 0 1 1 1 0

Binary numbers can also be multiplied with bits after a binary point:

               1 0 1 . 1 0 1     A (5.625 in decimal)
             × 1 1 0 . 0 1       B (6.25 in decimal)
             -------------------
                   1 . 0 1 1 0 1   ← Corresponds to a 'one' in B
     +           0 0 . 0 0 0 0     ← Corresponds to a 'zero' in B
     +         0 0 0 . 0 0 0
     +       1 0 1 1 . 0 1
     +     1 0 1 1 0 . 1
     ---------------------------
     =   1 0 0 0 1 1 . 0 0 1 0 1 (35.15625 in decimal)

See also Booth's multiplication algorithm.

Multiplication table

[edit]
1 1
0 0 0
1 0 1

The binary multiplication table is the same as the truth table of the logical conjunction operation .

Division

[edit]

Long division in binary is again similar to its decimal counterpart.

In the example below, the divisor is 1012, or 5 in decimal, while the dividend is 110112, or 27 in decimal. The procedure is the same as that of decimal long division; here, the divisor 1012 goes into the first three digits 1102 of the dividend one time, so a "1" is written on the top line. This result is multiplied by the divisor, and subtracted from the first three digits of the dividend; the next digit (a "1") is included to obtain a new three-digit sequence:

              1
        ___________
1 0 1   ) 1 1 0 1 1
        − 1 0 1
          -----
          0 0 1

The procedure is then repeated with the new sequence, continuing until the digits in the dividend have been exhausted:

             1 0 1
       ___________
1 0 1  ) 1 1 0 1 1
       − 1 0 1
         -----
             1 1 1
         −   1 0 1
             -----
             0 1 0

Thus, the quotient of 110112 divided by 1012 is 1012, as shown on the top line, while the remainder, shown on the bottom line, is 102. In decimal, this corresponds to the fact that 27 divided by 5 is 5, with a remainder of 2.

Aside from long division, one can also devise the procedure so as to allow for over-subtracting from the partial remainder at each iteration, thereby leading to alternative methods which are less systematic, but more flexible as a result.

Square root

[edit]

The process of taking a binary square root digit by digit is the same as for a decimal square root and is explained here. An example is:

             1 0 0 1
            ---------
           √ 1010001
             1
            ---------
      101     01 
               0
             --------
      1001     100
                 0
             --------
      10001    10001
               10001
              -------
                   0

Bitwise operations

[edit]

Though not directly related to the numerical interpretation of binary symbols, sequences of bits may be manipulated using Boolean logical operators. When a string of binary symbols is manipulated in this way, it is called a bitwise operation; the logical operators AND, OR, and XOR may be performed on corresponding bits in two binary numerals provided as input. The logical NOT operation may be performed on individual bits in a single binary numeral provided as input. Sometimes, such operations may be used as arithmetic short-cuts, and may have other computational benefits as well. For example, an arithmetic shift left of a binary number is the equivalent of multiplication by a (positive, integral) power of 2.

Conversion to and from other numeral systems

[edit]

Decimal to binary

[edit]
Conversion of (357)10 to binary notation results in (101100101)

To convert from a base-10 integer to its base-2 (binary) equivalent, the number is divided by two. The remainder is the least-significant bit. The quotient is again divided by two; its remainder becomes the next least significant bit. This process repeats until a quotient of one is reached. The sequence of remainders (including the final quotient of one) forms the binary value, as each remainder must be either zero or one when dividing by two. For example, (357)10 is expressed as (101100101)2.[43]

Binary to decimal

[edit]

Conversion from base-2 to base-10 simply inverts the preceding algorithm. The bits of the binary number are used one by one, starting with the most significant (leftmost) bit. Beginning with the value 0, the prior value is doubled, and the next bit is then added to produce the next value. This can be organized in a multi-column table. For example, to convert 100101011012 to decimal:

Prior value × 2 + Next bit = Next value
0 × 2 + 1 = 1
1 × 2 + 0 = 2
2 × 2 + 0 = 4
4 × 2 + 1 = 9
9 × 2 + 0 = 18
18 × 2 + 1 = 37
37 × 2 + 0 = 74
74 × 2 + 1 = 149
149 × 2 + 1 = 299
299 × 2 + 0 = 598
598 × 2 + 1 = 1197

The result is 119710. The first Prior Value of 0 is simply an initial decimal value. This method is an application of the Horner scheme.

Binary  1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1
Decimal  1×210 + 0×29 + 0×28 + 1×27 + 0×26 + 1×25 + 0×24 + 1×23 + 1×22 + 0×21 + 1×20 = 1197

The fractional parts of a number are converted with similar methods. They are again based on the equivalence of shifting with doubling or halving.

In a fractional binary number such as 0.110101101012, the first digit is , the second , etc. So if there is a 1 in the first place after the decimal, then the number is at least , and vice versa. Double that number is at least 1. This suggests the algorithm: Repeatedly double the number to be converted, record if the result is at least 1, and then throw away the integer part.

For example, , in binary, is:

Converting Result
0.
0.0
0.01
0.010
0.0101

Thus the repeating decimal fraction 0.3... is equivalent to the repeating binary fraction 0.01... .

Or for example, 0.110, in binary, is:

Converting Result
0.1 0.
0.1 × 2 = 0.2 < 1 0.0
0.2 × 2 = 0.4 < 1 0.00
0.4 × 2 = 0.8 < 1 0.000
0.8 × 2 = 1.6 ≥ 1 0.0001
0.6 × 2 = 1.2 ≥ 1 0.00011
0.2 × 2 = 0.4 < 1 0.000110
0.4 × 2 = 0.8 < 1 0.0001100
0.8 × 2 = 1.6 ≥ 1 0.00011001
0.6 × 2 = 1.2 ≥ 1 0.000110011
0.2 × 2 = 0.4 < 1 0.0001100110

This is also a repeating binary fraction 0.00011... . It may come as a surprise that terminating decimal fractions can have repeating expansions in binary. It is for this reason that many are surprised to discover that 1/10 + ... + 1/10 (addition of 10 numbers) differs from 1 in binary floating point arithmetic. In fact, the only binary fractions with terminating expansions are of the form of an integer divided by a power of 2, which 1/10 is not.

The final conversion is from binary to decimal fractions. The only difficulty arises with repeating fractions, but otherwise the method is to shift the fraction to an integer, convert it as above, and then divide by the appropriate power of two in the decimal base. For example:

Another way of converting from binary to decimal, often quicker for a person familiar with hexadecimal, is to do so indirectly—first converting ( in binary) into ( in hexadecimal) and then converting ( in hexadecimal) into ( in decimal).

For very large numbers, these simple methods are inefficient because they perform a large number of multiplications or divisions where one operand is very large. A simple divide-and-conquer algorithm is more effective asymptotically: given a binary number, it is divided by 10k, where k is chosen so that the quotient roughly equals the remainder; then each of these pieces is converted to decimal and the two are concatenated. Given a decimal number, it can be split into two pieces of about the same size, each of which is converted to binary, whereupon the first converted piece is multiplied by 10k and added to the second converted piece, where k is the number of decimal digits in the second, least-significant piece before conversion.

Hexadecimal

[edit]
0hex = 0dec = 0oct 0 0 0 0
1hex = 1dec = 1oct 0 0 0 1
2hex = 2dec = 2oct 0 0 1 0
3hex = 3dec = 3oct 0 0 1 1
4hex = 4dec = 4oct 0 1 0 0
5hex = 5dec = 5oct 0 1 0 1
6hex = 6dec = 6oct 0 1 1 0
7hex = 7dec = 7oct 0 1 1 1
8hex = 8dec = 10oct 1 0 0 0
9hex = 9dec = 11oct 1 0 0 1
Ahex = 10dec = 12oct 1 0 1 0
Bhex = 11dec = 13oct 1 0 1 1
Chex = 12dec = 14oct 1 1 0 0
Dhex = 13dec = 15oct 1 1 0 1
Ehex = 14dec = 16oct 1 1 1 0
Fhex = 15dec = 17oct 1 1 1 1

Binary may be converted to and from hexadecimal more easily. This is because the radix of the hexadecimal system (16) is a power of the radix of the binary system (2). More specifically, 16 = 24, so it takes four digits of binary to represent one digit of hexadecimal, as shown in the adjacent table.

To convert a hexadecimal number into its binary equivalent, simply substitute the corresponding binary digits:

3A16 = 0011 10102
E716 = 1110 01112

To convert a binary number into its hexadecimal equivalent, divide it into groups of four bits. If the number of bits isn't a multiple of four, simply insert extra 0 bits at the left (called padding). For example:

10100102 = 0101 0010 grouped with padding = 5216
110111012 = 1101 1101 grouped = DD16

To convert a hexadecimal number into its decimal equivalent, multiply the decimal equivalent of each hexadecimal digit by the corresponding power of 16 and add the resulting values:

C0E716 = (12 × 163) + (0 × 162) + (14 × 161) + (7 × 160) = (12 × 4096) + (0 × 256) + (14 × 16) + (7 × 1) = 49,38310

Octal

[edit]

Binary is also easily converted to the octal numeral system, since octal uses a radix of 8, which is a power of two (namely, 23, so it takes exactly three binary digits to represent an octal digit). The correspondence between octal and binary numerals is the same as for the first eight digits of hexadecimal in the table above. Binary 000 is equivalent to the octal digit 0, binary 111 is equivalent to octal 7, and so forth.

Octal Binary
0 000
1 001
2 010
3 011
4 100
5 101
6 110
7 111

Converting from octal to binary proceeds in the same fashion as it does for hexadecimal:

658 = 110 1012
178 = 001 1112

And from binary to octal:

1011002 = 101 1002 grouped = 548
100112 = 010 0112 grouped with padding = 238

And from octal to decimal:

658 = (6 × 81) + (5 × 80) = (6 × 8) + (5 × 1) = 5310
1278 = (1 × 82) + (2 × 81) + (7 × 80) = (1 × 64) + (2 × 8) + (7 × 1) = 8710

Representing real numbers

[edit]

Non-integers can be represented by using negative powers, which are set off from the other digits by means of a radix point (called a decimal point in the decimal system). For example, the binary number 11.012 means:

1 × 21 (1 × 2 = 2) plus
1 × 20 (1 × 1 = 1) plus
0 × 2−1 (0 × 12 = 0) plus
1 × 2−2 (1 × 14 = 0.25)

For a total of 3.25 decimal.

All dyadic rational numbers have a terminating binary numeral—the binary representation has a finite number of terms after the radix point. Other rational numbers have binary representation, but instead of terminating, they recur, with a finite sequence of digits repeating indefinitely. For instance

The phenomenon that the binary representation of any rational is either terminating or recurring also occurs in other radix-based numeral systems. See, for instance, the explanation in decimal. Another similarity is the existence of alternative representations for any terminating representation, relying on the fact that 0.111111... is the sum of the geometric series 2−1 + 2−2 + 2−3 + ... which is 1.

Binary numerals that neither terminate nor recur represent irrational numbers. For instance,

  • 0.10100100010000100000100... does have a pattern, but it is not a fixed-length recurring pattern, so the number is irrational
  • 1.0110101000001001111001100110011111110... is the binary representation of , the square root of 2, another irrational. It has no discernible pattern.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ Robson, Eleanor; Stedall, Jacqueline, eds. (2009), "Myth No. 2: the Horus eye fractions", The Oxford Handbook of the History of Mathematics, Oxford University Press, p. 790, ISBN 9780199213122
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