• Question: What is one to 100 in binary code? #I get your joke!

    Asked by Matty. W to Ryan on 6 Mar 2016.
    • Photo: Ryan Bakewell

      Ryan Bakewell answered on 6 Mar 2016:


      That’s easy… let me see:
      0 0
      1 1
      2 10
      3 11
      4 100
      5 101
      6 110
      7 111
      8 1000
      9 1001
      10 1010
      11 1011
      12 1100
      13 1101
      14 1110
      15 1111
      16 10000
      17 10001
      18 10010
      19 10011
      20 10100
      21 10101
      22 10110
      23 10111
      24 11000
      25 11001
      26 11010
      27 11011
      28 11100
      29 11101
      30 11110
      31 11111
      32 100000
      33 100001
      34 100010
      35 100011
      36 100100
      37 100101
      38 100110
      39 100111
      40 101000
      41 101001
      42 101010
      43 101011
      44 101100
      45 101101
      46 101110
      47 101111
      48 110000
      49 110001
      50 110010
      51 110011
      52 110100
      53 110101
      54 110110
      55 110111
      56 111000
      57 111001
      58 111010
      59 111011
      60 111100
      61 111101
      62 111110
      63 111111
      64 1000000
      65 1000001
      66 1000010
      67 1000011
      68 1000100
      69 1000101
      70 1000110
      71 1000111
      72 1001000
      73 1001001
      74 1001010
      75 1001011
      76 1001100
      77 1001101
      78 1001110
      79 1001111
      80 1010000
      81 1010001
      82 1010010
      83 1010011
      84 1010100
      85 1010101
      86 1010110
      87 1010111
      88 1011000
      89 1011001
      90 1011010
      91 1011011
      92 1011100
      93 1011101
      94 1011110
      95 1011111
      96 1100000
      97 1100001
      98 1100010
      99 1100011
      100 1100100
      (It’s amazing what you can do with copy and paste 😉 )

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