Difference between revisions of "Manuals/calci/DEC2BIN"
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*'places' argument is used to return the output with leading zeros. If 'places' argument is not used, 'Calci' uses the minimum number of characters required to display the binary output. | *'places' argument is used to return the output with leading zeros. If 'places' argument is not used, 'Calci' uses the minimum number of characters required to display the binary output. | ||
− | + | *If 'places' is negative, Calci ignores the places and displays a 10 bit binary output. Most significant bit is the sign bit and remaining are magnitude bits. | |
− | * | + | |
− | + | *If 'places' is not an integer, Calci truncates the value and uses the integer part as input. | |
− | *If 'places' | ||
For example, | For example, |
Revision as of 20:40, 17 November 2013
DEC2BIN(number, places)
- Where 'number' is the decimal integer to be converted and
- 'places' is the number of characters to display the output.
DEC2BIN() function converts a decimal number to its binary equivalent.
Description
DEC2BIN(number, places)
- The 'number' should be in the range -512 to 511. If it exceeds the limit, Calci gives a #NUM! error.
- DEC2BIN returns an #ERROR, when the 'number' is nonnumeric.
- 'places' argument is used to return the output with leading zeros. If 'places' argument is not used, 'Calci' uses the minimum number of characters required to display the binary output.
- If 'places' is negative, Calci ignores the places and displays a 10 bit binary output. Most significant bit is the sign bit and remaining are magnitude bits.
- If 'places' is not an integer, Calci truncates the value and uses the integer part as input.
For example,
DEC2BIN(10, 4) returns 1010
DEC2BIN(100) returns 0001100100
DEC2BIN(30,5.5) returns 011110
Examples
Function | Binary Output |
DEC2BIN(10) | 0000001010 |
DEC2BIN(10,4) | 1010 |
DEC2BIN(100,8) | 01100100 |
DEC2BIN(-56) | 1111001000 |
DEC2BIN(-512) | 1000000000 |