Computer Science, asked by jatin2558, 10 months ago

i know that non-positional number system represents the same value, regardless of its numerical position: yes or no​

Answers

Answered by prbh7099
3

Answer:

A positional number system is one in which a digit’s value depends on its where it occurs in the representation. Our usual decimal system is positional.

A non-positional number system is anything else. Tally marks are a common example:

It doesn’t matter where a stroke appears; it always counts as one.

The Roman numeral system is an interesting mix of positional and non-positional systems. For example, we are usually taught that I=1,V=5, X=10 , etc. However, if that were true, all of these would represent the same number:

XVI

XIV

VIX

But in fact the first two represent different numbers ( 16 and 14 respectively),

Answered by anhadrohilla
0

Answer:

Non-standard positional numeral systems here designates numeral systems that may loosely be described as positional systems, but that do not entirely comply with the following description of standard positional systems: In a standard positional numeral system, the base b is a positive integer, and b different numerals are used to represent all non-negative integers. The standard set of numerals contains the b values 0, 1, 2, etc., up to b − 1, but the value is weighted according to the position of the digit in a number.

Explanation:

Similar questions