Math, asked by iniyavan82, 3 months ago

what is Hexadecimal?. give one example​

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Answered by venkatsaiteja022
0

Step-by-step explanation:

Hexadecimal is a base-16 number system. It is a different method of representing numbers than the base-10 system we use in every day practice. In base-10, we count in multiples of 10 before adding another digit. For example, "8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12..." and "98 - 99 - 100 - 101 - 102..."

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Answered by AanchalChauhan
0

Answer:The hexadecimal numeral system, often shortened to "hex", is a numeral system made up of 16 symbols (base 16). The standard numeral system is called decimal (base 10) and uses ten symbols: 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. Hexadecimal uses the decimal numbers and six extra symbols. There are no numerical symbols that represent values greater than nine, so letters taken from the English alphabet are used, specifically A, B, C, D, E and F. Hexadecimal A = decimal 10, and hexadecimal F = decimal 15.As computers got bigger, it was more convenient to group bits by four instead of three. This doubles the numbers that the symbol would represent; it can have 16 values instead of eight. Hex = 6 and Decimal = 10, so it is called hexadecimal. In computer jargon four bits make a nibble (sometimes spelled nybble). A nibble is one hexadecimal digit, written using a symbol 0-9 or A-F. Two nibbles make a byte (8 bits). Most computer operations use the byte, or a multiple of the byte (16 bits, 24, 32, 64, etc.). Hexadecimal makes it easier to write these large binary numbers.

Explanation:

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