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Storyline : - Different Number Systems

The document discusses different number systems including binary, octal, hexadecimal and their conversions to decimal. It explains how computers use the binary system and how binary numbers are represented. Negative numbers can be represented using signed magnitude, 1's complement and 2's complement methods. Binary arithmetic operations like addition, subtraction are covered along with issues like overflow and underflow that can occur.

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Amit Rahi
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
24 views24 pages

Storyline : - Different Number Systems

The document discusses different number systems including binary, octal, hexadecimal and their conversions to decimal. It explains how computers use the binary system and how binary numbers are represented. Negative numbers can be represented using signed magnitude, 1's complement and 2's complement methods. Binary arithmetic operations like addition, subtraction are covered along with issues like overflow and underflow that can occur.

Uploaded by

Amit Rahi
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Storyline …

• Different number systems


• Why use different ones?
• Binary / Octal / Hexadecimal
• Conversions
• Negative number representation
• Binary arithmetic
• Overflow / Underflow
2
Number Systems
Four number system

ƒ Decimal (10)
ƒ Binary (2)
ƒ Octal (8)
ƒ Hexadecimal (16)
ƒ ............

3
Binary numbers?
• Computers work only on two states
– On
– Off
• Basic memory elements hold only two states
– Zero / One
• Thus a number system with two elements
{0,1}
• A binary digit – bit !
4
Decimal numbers

1439 = 1 x 103 + 4 x 102 + 3 x 101 + 9 x 100

Thousands Hundreds Tens Ones

• Radix = 10

5
Binary Decimal
1101 = 1 x 23 + 1 x 22 + 0 x 21 + 1 x 20
=1x8+1x4+0x2+1x1
=8+4+0+1

(1101)2 = (13)10

1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, ….


6
Decimal Binary

2 13 1 LSB
2 6 0
2 3 1
2 1 1 MSB
0

(13)10 = (1101)2

7
Octal Decimal
137 = 1 x 82 + 3 x 81 + 7 x 80
= 1 x 64 + 3 x 8 + 7 x 1
= 64 + 24 + 7

(137)8 = (95)10

• Digits used in Octal number system – 0 to 7


8
Decimal Octal

8 95 7 LSP
8 11 3
8 1 1
0 MSP

(95)10 = (137)8

9
Hex Decimal
BAD = 11 x 162 + 10 x 161 + 13 x 160
= 11 x 256 + 10 x 16 + 13 x 1
= 2816 + 160 + 13

(BAD)16 = (2989)10

A = 10, B = 11, C = 12, D = 13, E = 14, F = 15

10
Decimal Hex

16 2989 13 LSP
16 186 10
16 11 11
0 MSP

(2989)10 = (BAD)16

11
Why octal or hex?
• Ease of use and conversion
• Three bits make one octal digit
111 010 110 101
7 2 6 5 => 7265 in octal

• Four bits make one hexadecimal digit


1110 1011 0101 4 bits = nibble

E B 5 => EB5 in hex


12
Negative numbers

Three representations
• Signed magnitude
• 1’s complement
• 2’s complement

13
Sign magnitude
• Make MSB represent sign
• Positive = 0
• Negative = 1
• E.g. for a 3 bit set Sign Bit Bit
– “-2”
1 1 0
MSB LSB

14
1’s complement
• MSB as in sign magnitude
• Complement all the other bits
• Given a positive number complement all
bits to get negative equivalent
• E.g. for a 3 bit set
– “-2” (value) Sign Bit Bit
(+2) 0 1 0
(-2) 1 0 1
15
2’s complement
• 1’s complement plus one
• E.g. for a 3 bit set
– “-2”
Sign Bit Bit
(steps) (value)
1.start with
positive # (+2)10 0 1 0
2. make 1’s
comp. (+2) 1 0 1
3. add 1
+1
4. 2’s comp.
(-2) 1 1 0
16
Decimal Signed 1’s complement 2’s complement
number magnitude
3 011 011 011
2 010 010 010
1 001 001 001
0 000 000 000
-0 100 111 ---
-1 101 110 111
-2 110 101 110
-3 111 100 101
-4 100

Do we really need two representations for 0?


Maximum value N bits can hold : 2n –1 (unsigned representation!)
What about signed?
17
Binary Arithmetic
• Addition / subtraction
• Unsigned
• Signed
– Using negative numbers

18
Unsigned: Addition
Like normal decimal addition
B
+ 0 1
0101 (5)
A 0 0 1 + 1001 (9)
1 1 (1*) 0 1110 (14)

The carry out of the MSB is neglected


* carry
19
Unsigned: Subtraction
Like normal decimal subtraction
B
- 0 1 1001 (9)
A
0 0 (1*) 1 - 0101 (5)
1 1 0 0100 (4)

A borrow (shown in red) from the MSB implies a


negative
* borrow
20
Signed arithmetic

• Use a negative number representation


scheme

• Reduces subtraction to addition

21
2’s complement
Negative numbers in 2’s complement

001 ( 1)10
101 (-3)10
110 (-2)10

The carry out of the MSB is lost


22
Overflow / Underflow
• Maximum value N bits can hold : 2n –1
(unsigned!)
• When addition result is bigger than the biggest
number of bits can hold.
– Overflow
• When addition result is smaller than the smallest
number the bits can hold.
– Underflow
• Addition of a positive and a negative number
cannot give an overflow or underflow.
23
Overflow example
011 (+3)10
011 (+3)10
110 (+6)10 ????

2’s complement computer interprets it as –2 !!


(+6)10 = (0110)2 requires four bits !

24
Underflow examples
Two’s complement addition
101 (-3)10
101 (-3)10
Carry 1 010 (-6)10 ????

The computer sees it as +2.


(-6)10 = (1010)2 again requires four bits !
25

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