Summary
The binary number system is a base-2 number system. This means it only has two numbers: 0 and 1. The number system that we normally use is the decimal number system. It has 10 numbers: 0-9.
Why use binary numbers?
Binary numbers are very useful in electronics and computer systems. Digital electronics can easily work with a sort of “on” or “off” system where “on” is a 1 and “off” is a zero. Often times the 1 is a “high” voltage, while the 0 is a “low” voltage or ground.
How do binary numbers work?
Binary numbers only use the numbers 1 and 0. In a binary number each “place” represents a power of 2.
For example:
1 = 20 = 1
10 = 21 = 2
100 = 22 = 4
1000 = 23 = 8
10000 = 24 = 16
Converting from Binary to Decimal
If you want to convert a number from binary to decimal, you can add up the “places” that we showed above. Each place that has a “1” represents a power of 2, starting with the 0s place.
Examples:
101 binary = 4 + 0 + 1 = 5 decimal
11110 binary = 16 + 8 + 4 + 2 + 0 = 30 decimal
10001 binary = 16 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 1 = 17 decimal
Converting from Decimal to Binary
Converting a decimal number to a binary number can be more difficult. It helps if you know the powers of two (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, …).
- First subtract the largest power of two possible from the number you are converting.
- Then put a “1” in that place of the binary number.
- Next, you subtract the next biggest power of two possible from the remainder. You put a 1 in that position.
- You keep repeating the above until there is no remainder left.
- All the places without a “1” get a “0”.
Example:
What is 27 decimal in binary?
- What is the largest power of 2 that is less than or equal to 27? That is 16. So subtract 16 from 27. 27 – 16 = 11
- Put a 1 in the 16’s place. That is 24, which is the 5th place because it starts with the 0’s place. So we have 1xxxx so far.
- Now do the same for the remainder, 11. The largest power of two number we can subtract from 11 is 23, or 8. So, 11 – 8 = 3.
- Put a 1 in the 8’s place. Now we have 11xxx.
- Next is to subtract 21, or 2 which is 2 -1 = 1.
- 11x1x
- Lastly is 1-1 = 0.
- 11×11 9. Put zero’s in the places without 1’s and we get the answer = 11011.
Other examples:
14 = 8 + 4 + 2 + 0 = 1110
21 = 16 + 0 + 4 + 0 + 1 = 10101
44 = 32 + 0 + 8 + 4 + 0 + 0 = 101100
Helpful Binary Tables First 10

Numbers Binary Position Values in Decimal (powers of 2)

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