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Published byNathan Austin Modified over 9 years ago
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A-Level Computing Data representation
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Objectives Know how data can be represented in a computer system Understand the need for various forms of representation Be able to explain and convert from one form to another
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Data Representation Data on a computer system is stored in electrical signals These represent binary data Can be one of two states Here they are represented as a 0 or 1 Cannot be anything else
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Data Representation A 0 or 1 is known as a BIT BITS are grouped into…….BYTES (8 BITS) A group of BYTES is a WORD The size of a word depends on the computer, a 64 bit machine has a word size of 8 bits.
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Data Representation 4567 Denary Notation – grouped into values of 10s 1000100101 4567
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Data Representation Binary representation is in the form of 2’s as opposed to denary (base – 2) 1286432168421 10000011
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Data Representation Binary addition similar to denary addition, when a result is greater than 9 we ‘pass one over’ 0 + 0 = 0 0 + 1 = 1 1 + 1 = 10 (carry 1 over) 1 + 1 + 1 = 11 (carry 1 over)
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Data Representation Binary multiplication works in the same way as denary (7 x 10 = 70) Move decimal point along by number of 0s 0 X 0 = 0 0 X 1 = 0 1 X 1 = 1 1 X 10 = 10
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Data Representation Negative numbers are represented using two’s compliment form Significant bit is Negative -1286432168421 10000011
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Data Representation Converting negative denary to binary Basic rule is to (invert the digits and add 1) 3 00000011 Convert = 11111100 Add 1 = 11111101
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Hexadecimal Binary can be complex for humans to understand Hexadecimal is a ‘halfway house’ Used as a shorthand form of binary In base 16
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Data Representation DenaryHexadecimal 11 22 33 44 55 66 77 88 99 10A 11B 12C 13D 14E 15F 16G
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Data Representation Grouped into 4 bits Each group represents one number E.g. 11010011 = 211 1101 = 13 = D 0011 = 3 = 3 = D3
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