L2. 6. Digital and Technology_Niv Intermédiaire_AGFE - Fev22 en-GB
I am a basic coder
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Even if you are not going to start working tomorrow, you are thinking about it. And you are reminded of this at university and at home! In addition to being successful in your studies, you are expected to be comfortable with computers. You are 'digital native', i.e. you were born in a society where computers and technology are everywhere. So this does not impress you. However, it is not enough to be comfortable. Your and your future employers demand more. You need to be able to understand computer logic, and to mobilise all its resources. All sectors of economic life are affected. And almost all jobs are affected. You need to understand the logic of programming and be familiar, at various levels, with computer code languages.
I am practising transcribing a number in binary
For a computer to be able to process information, the information that the machine will have to process must be translated into a specific language, the binary language. Binary language is a base 2 language. There are only two situations: 0 (zero) or 1 (one). In other words, the current flows or the current does not flow; the information is true or false. Through this coding system, it is possible to translate all types of information into binary language and to define commands for a computer through an electrical circuit: the microprocessor. Sounds simple! Why don't you give it a try?
Watch the video by clicking on the link: https://youtu.be/_kpAWHDsVzA: And answer the question:
Q1. How is the number '57' written in binary? *
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