[Blindmath] binary basics

Paul Chapin pdchapin at amherst.edu
Fri Mar 20 17:32:49 UTC 2015


0b10 would be the way I would have written it back when I was doing C programming.

Paul Chapin
Academic Technology Specialist
Amherst College
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From: Jorge Paez <jorgeapaez1994 at gmail.com<mailto:jorgeapaez1994 at gmail.com>>
Date: Friday, March 20, 2015 at 12:04 PM
To: Paul Chapin <pdchapin at amherst.edu<mailto:pdchapin at amherst.edu>>, Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics <blindmath at nfbnet.org<mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org>>
Subject: Re: [Blindmath] binary basics

OK, so let's see if I'm right.
Taking the 10 from the joke, you're saying it'd be 0b10 in proper
binary notation?


On 3/20/15, Paul Chapin via Blindmath <blindmath at nfbnet.org<mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org>> wrote:
0b is the standard way for programmers to designate that the number than
follows is binary in the same way the 0x indicates the number is
hexadecimal.

There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and
those who don't. (Sorry, it's an old joke but it shows the potential for
confusion without the leading 0b).

Paul Chapin
Academic Technology Specialist
Amherst College
X2144

Amherst College IT staff will never ask for your password, including by
email. Any email asking for any password or username is almost certainly
bogus. Never click on a link in an email to a site that requires a login as
the link may be bogus. Type in the address yourself. Please keep your
passwords private to protect yourself and the security of our network.

From: Jorge Paez via Blindmath
<blindmath at nfbnet.org<mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org><mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org>>
Reply-To: Jorge Paez
<jorgeapaez1994 at gmail.com<mailto:jorgeapaez1994 at gmail.com><mailto:jorgeapaez1994 at gmail.com>>, Blind Math list
for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org<mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org><mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org>>
Date: Friday, March 20, 2015 at 11:32 AM
To: derek riemer
<Derek.Riemer at colorado.edu<mailto:Derek.Riemer at colorado.edu><mailto:Derek.Riemer at colorado.edu>>, Blind Math
list for those interested in mathematics
<blindmath at nfbnet.org<mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org><mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org>>
Subject: Re: [Blindmath] binary basics

Thanks everyone.
Awesome post by the way Tyler , very helpful.
For those of you who wrote binary notation in your message though,
what's the B supposed to represent?
Is that what you use instead of the exponent symbol?





On 3/20/15, derek riemer via Blindmath
<blindmath at nfbnet.org<mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org><mailto:blindmath at nfbnet.org>> wrote:
As well, Adding, subtracting, ... is the same. We carry the 1 if adding.

2+2

0b10 + 0b10

10
10
--------
100
What I did there is 1+1 is 10 in binary, or 2 in base 10. The 0 gets
dropped in the 2's place, and the 1 gets carried. Then we add it to
whatever is in the 4's place, and there you go.
In most real world places, you would convert the binary to hex, and use
that for addition, because it is simply easier.

On 3/20/2015 8:42 AM, Littlefield, Tyler via Blindmath wrote:
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Hash: SHA1

Here you go, I wrote this a while back.
https://tysdomain.com/blog/?p=133
On 3/20/2015 10:37 AM, Bill Dengler (Windows 7 on Retina macBook Pro)
via Blindmath wrote:
I'll write a quick intro : Binary is the base 2 number system, so
it's place values are powers of 2. 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256,
512, 1024, 2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, 32768, 65536, etc. To represent
a number in binary, you must represent it using 1 and the powers of
2. If a number has a power, insert a 1, if not 0. For example : 1
0b1 2 0b10 (2+0) 3 0b11 (2+1) 4 0b100 (4+0 twos+0 ones) 7 0b111
(4+2+1) 9 0b1001 (8+0 fours+0 twos+1) If you need more
clarification please email. Thanks, Bill. -----Original
Message----- From: Blindmath [mailto:blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org]
On Behalf Of Jorge Paez via Blindmath Sent: Friday, March 20, 2015
10:16 AM To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics
Subject: [Blindmath] binary basics

Hi all: I was wondering if anyone knew of a book that I could get
on bookshare that would be a good introduction to binary numbers?



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