CapitalsLowercase
Letter
Binary Code
A 01000001 B 01000010 C 01000011 D 01000100 E 01000101 F 01000110 G 01000111 H 01001000 I 01001001 J 01001010 K 01001011 L 01001100 M 01001101 N 01001110 O 01001111 P 01010000 Q 01010001 R 01010010 S 01010011 T 01010100 U 01010101 V 01010110 W 01010111 X 01011000 Y 01011001 Z 01011010Letter
Binary Code
a 01100001 b 01100010 c 01100011 d 01100100 e 01100101 f 01100110 g 01100111 h 01101000 i 01101001 j 01101010 k 01101011 l 01101100 m 01101101 n 01101110 o 01101111 p 01110000 q 01110001 r 01110010 s 01110011 t 01110100 u 01110101 v 01110110 w 01110111 x 01111000 y 01111001 z 01111010For Capital A, 0100 0001. For Lowercase A, 0110 0001.
twinkle twinkle little star or alphabet song
yes there is computer language that does not have any alphabet it just contains 1's and 0's ie binary language.
8 bits
I think its something like this {| ! width="30%" | Letter ! Binary Code | A01000001B01000010C01000011D01000100E01000101F01000110G01000111H01001000I01001001J01001010K01001011L01001100M01001101N01001110O01001111P01010000Q01010001R01010010S01010011T01010100U01010101V01010110W01010111X01011000Y01011001Z01011010 and ! width="30%" | Letter ! Binary Code | a01100001b01100010c01100011d01100100e01100101f01100110g01100111h01101000i01101001j01101010k01101011l01101100m01101101n01101110o01101111p01110000q01110001r01110010s01110011t01110100u01110101v01110110w01110111x01111000y01111001z01111010 |}
The idea of binary code came about in the late 1600s and is often credited to Gottfried Leibniz , a German mathematician and all round clever person. Francis Bacon was using a binary code with letters of the alphabet as a cipher, so aaab aabb etc exactly the same as binary, this is in his book The Advancement of Learning.
Neither of the following are true about 1 bit, it can not represent decimal values 0 and 9 nor can it be used to represent one character in the lowercase English alphabet and one binary digit four binary. A true statement would be that 1 bit is represented by the decimal values 0 or 1.
You can get detailed guides on binary on kerryr.net/pioneers/binary.htm swansontec.com/binary.html
by sending electrical impulses in the the i/o controller and the controller deciphers it as binary or HEX, and the changes that in to regular alphabet
In computers, a bit is a single digit of binary code. It is also one eighth (1/8) of a byte. This is because there are eight binary digits to make any letter of the alphabet, making one byte one single letter of text.
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 is all the alphabet turned into ASCII first decimal then ASCII. Hope you find it useful.
Binary what? Binary numbers? Binary stars? Binary fission?