Write the number in expanded notation. 111100.1101two
C cs29486 New member Joined Jan 28, 2011 Messages 1 Jan 28, 2011 #1 Write the number in expanded notation. 111100.1101two
tkhunny Moderator Staff member Joined Apr 12, 2005 Messages 11,339 Jan 28, 2011 #2 You'll have to throw us a bone and tell us what you mean. Otherwise, it's just guessing. 32 16 8 4 0 0 . (1/2) (1/4) 0 (1/16)ten?
You'll have to throw us a bone and tell us what you mean. Otherwise, it's just guessing. 32 16 8 4 0 0 . (1/2) (1/4) 0 (1/16)ten?
S soroban Elite Member Joined Jan 28, 2005 Messages 5,586 Jan 29, 2011 #3 Hello, cs29486! tkhunny is right . . . Define "expanded notation". \(\displaystyle \text{Write the number in expanded notation. }\:111100.1101_{\text{two}}\) Click to expand... Maybe you're looking for something like this? . . \(\displaystyle 1\!\cdot\!2^5 + 1\!\cdot\!2^4 + 1\!\cdot\!2^3 + 1\!\cdot\!2^2 + 0\!\cdot\!2^1 + 0\!\cdot\!2^0 + 1\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}1} + 1\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}2} + 0\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}3} + 1\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}4}\)
Hello, cs29486! tkhunny is right . . . Define "expanded notation". \(\displaystyle \text{Write the number in expanded notation. }\:111100.1101_{\text{two}}\) Click to expand... Maybe you're looking for something like this? . . \(\displaystyle 1\!\cdot\!2^5 + 1\!\cdot\!2^4 + 1\!\cdot\!2^3 + 1\!\cdot\!2^2 + 0\!\cdot\!2^1 + 0\!\cdot\!2^0 + 1\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}1} + 1\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}2} + 0\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}3} + 1\!\cdot\!2^{\text{-}4}\)