Binary
From Oracle FAQ
Binary is a numbering system with only two digit values: 0 (zero) and 1 (one). These digits are called bits.
Conversion functions[edit]
Use the following conversion PL/SQL functions to convert binary values to decimal and vice versa:
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION bin2dec (binval in char) RETURN number IS i number; digits number; result number := 0; current_digit char(1); current_digit_dec number; BEGIN digits := length(binval); for i in 1..digits loop current_digit := SUBSTR(binval, i, 1); current_digit_dec := to_number(current_digit); result := (result * 2) + current_digit_dec; end loop; return result; END bin2dec; / SQL> SELECT bin2dec('10110') FROM dual; BIN2DEC('10110') ---------------- 22
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION dec2bin (N in number) RETURN varchar2 IS binval varchar2(64); N2 number := N; BEGIN while ( N2 > 0 ) loop binval := mod(N2, 2) || binval; N2 := trunc( N2 / 2 ); end loop; return binval; END dec2bin; / SQL> SELECT dec2bin(22) FROM dual; DEC2BIN(22) ---------------- 10110
Conversion[edit]
Simple decimal to binary conversion table:
Decimal | Binary |
---|---|
0 | 0000 0000 |
1 | 0000 0001 |
2 | 0000 0010 |
3 | 0000 0011 |
4 | 0000 0100 |
5 | 0000 0101 |
6 | 0000 0110 |
7 | 0000 0111 |
8 | 0000 1000 |
9 | 0000 1001 |
10 | 0000 1010 |
Also see[edit]
- bit - Oracle bit-operator functions
- Octal - numbering system with 8 digits
- Hexadecimal - numbering system with 16 digits
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