Binary digits
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
- Task
Create and display the sequence of binary digits for a given non-negative integer.
The decimal value 5 should produce an output of 101 The decimal value 50 should produce an output of 110010 The decimal value 9000 should produce an output of 10001100101000
The results can be achieved using built-in radix functions within the language (if these are available), or alternatively a user defined function can be used.
The output produced should consist just of the binary digits of each number followed by a newline.
There should be no other whitespace, radix or sign markers in the produced output, and leading zeros should not appear in the results.
0815
<lang 0815>}:r:|~ Read numbers in a loop.
}:b: Treat the queue as a stack and <:2:= accumulate the binary digits /=>&~ of the given number. ^:b: <:0:-> Enqueue negative 1 as a sentinel. { Dequeue the first binary digit. }:p: ~%={+ Rotate each binary digit into place and print it. ^:p: <:a:~$ Output a newline.
^:r:</lang>
- Output:
Note that 0815 reads numeric input in hexadecimal.
<lang bash>echo -e "5\n32\n2329" | 0815 bin.0 101 110010 10001100101001</lang>
11l
<lang 11l>L(n) [0, 5, 50, 9000]
print(‘#4 = #.’.format(n, bin(n)))</lang>
- Output:
0 = 0 5 = 101 50 = 110010 9000 = 10001100101000
360 Assembly
<lang 360asm>* Binary digits 27/08/2015 BINARY CSECT
USING BINARY,R12 LR R12,R15 set base register
BEGIN LA R10,4
LA R9,N
LOOPN MVC W,0(R9)
MVI FLAG,X'00' LA R8,32 LA R2,CBIN
LOOP TM W,B'10000000' test fist bit
BZ ZERO zero MVI FLAG,X'01' one written MVI 0(R2),C'1' write 1 B CONT
ZERO CLI FLAG,X'01' is one written ?
BNE BLANK MVI 0(R2),C'0' write 0 B CONT
BLANK BCTR R2,0 backspace CONT L R3,W
SLL R3,1 shilf left ST R3,W LA R2,1(R2) next bit BCT R8,LOOP loop on bits
PRINT CLI FLAG,X'00' is '0'
BNE NOTZERO MVI 0(R2),C'0' then write 0
NOTZERO L R1,0(R9)
XDECO R1,CDEC XPRNT CDEC,45 LA R9,4(R9) BCT R10,LOOPN loop on numbers
RETURN XR R15,R15 set return code
BR R14 return to caller
N DC F'0',F'5',F'50',F'9000' W DS F work FLAG DS X flag for trailing blanks CDEC DS CL12 decimal value
DC C' '
CBIN DC CL32' ' binary value
YREGS END BINARY</lang>
- Output:
0 0 5 101 50 110010 9000 10001100101000
6502 Assembly
This example has been written for the C64 and uses some BASIC routines to read the parameter after the SYS command and to print the result. Compile with the Turbo Macro Pro cross assembler:
tmpx -i dec2bin.s -o dec2bin.prg
Use the c1541 utility to create a disk image that can be loaded using VICE x64. Run with:
SYS828,x
where x is an integer ranging from 0 to 65535 (16 bit int). Floating point numbers are truncated and converted accordingly. The example can easily be modified to run on the VIC-20, just change the labels as follows:
chkcom = $cefd frmnum = $cd8a getadr = $d7f7 strout = $cb1e
<lang 6502asm>
- C64 - Binary digits
- http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Binary_digits
- *** labels ***
declow = $fb dechigh = $fc binstrptr = $fd ; $fe is used for the high byte of the address chkcom = $aefd frmnum = $ad8a getadr = $b7f7 strout = $ab1e
- *** main ***
*=$033c ; sys828 tbuffer ($033c-$03fb)
jsr chkcom ; check for and skip comma jsr frmnum ; evaluate numeric expression jsr getadr ; convert floating point number to two-byte int jsr dec2bin ; convert two-byte int to binary string lda #<binstr ; load the address of the binary string - low ldy #>binstr ; high byte jsr skiplz ; skip leading zeros, return an address in a/y ; that points to the first "1" jsr strout ; print the result rts
- *** subroutines ****
- Converts a 16 bit integer to a binary string.
- Input
- y - low byte of the integer
- a - high byte of the integer
- Output
- a 16 byte string stored at 'binstr'
dec2bin sty declow ; store the two-byte integer
sta dechigh lda #<binstr ; store the binary string address on the zero page sta binstrptr lda #>binstr sta binstrptr+1 ldx #$01 ; start conversion with the high byte
wordloop ldy #$00 ; bit counter byteloop asl declow,x ; shift left, bit 7 is shifted into carry
bcs one ; carry set? jump lda #"0" ; a="0" bne writebit
one lda #"1" ; a="1" writebit sta (binstrptr),y ; write the digit to the string
iny ; y++ cpy #$08 ; y==8 all bits converted? bne byteloop ; no -> convert next bit clc ; clear carry lda #$08 ; a=8 adc binstrptr ; add 8 to the string address pointer sta binstrptr bcc nooverflow ; address low byte did overflow? inc binstrptr+1 ; yes -> increase the high byte
nooverflow dex ; x--
bpl wordloop ; x<0? no -> convert the low byte rts ; yes -> conversion finished, return
- Skip leading zeros.
- Input
- a - low byte of the byte string address
- y - high byte -"-
- Output
- a - low byte of string start address without leading zeros
- y - high byte -"-
skiplz sta binstrptr ; store the binary string address on the zero page
sty binstrptr+1 ldy #$00 ; byte counter
skiploop lda (binstrptr),y ; load a byte from the string
iny ; y++ cpy #$11 ; y==17 beq endreached ; yes -> end of string reached without a "1" cmp #"1" ; a=="1" bne skiploop ; no -> take the next byte beq add2ptr ; yes -> jump
endreached dey ; move the pointer to the last 0 add2ptr clc
dey tya ; a=y adc binstrptr ; move the pointer to the first "1" in the string bcc loadhigh ; overflow? inc binstrptr+1 ; yes -> increase high byte
loadhigh ldy binstrptr+1
rts
- *** data ***
binstr .repeat 16, $00 ; reserve 16 bytes for the binary digits
.byte $0d, $00 ; newline + null terminator
</lang>
- Output:
SYS828,5 101 SYS828,50 110010 SYS828,9000 10001100101000 SYS828,4.7 100
8080 Assembly
<lang 8080asm>bdos: equ 5h ; CP/M system call puts: equ 9h ; Print string org 100h lxi h,5 ; Print value for 5 call prbin lxi h,50 ; Print value for 50 call prbin lxi h,9000 ; Print value for 9000 prbin: call bindgt ; Make binary representation of HL mvi c,puts ; Print it jmp bdos ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;;; Return the binary representation of the 16-bit number in HL ;;; as a string starting at [DE]. bindgt: lxi d,binend ; End of binary string ana a ; Clear carry flag binlp: dcx d ; Previous digit mov a,h ; Shift HL left, LSB into carry flag rar mov h,a mov a,l rar mov l,a mvi a,'0' ; Digit '0' or '1' depending on aci 0 ; status of carry flag. stax d mov a,h ; Is HL 0 now? ora l rz ; Then stop jmp binlp ; Otherwise, do next bit binstr: db '0000000000000000' ; Placeholder for string binend: db 13,10,'$' ; end with \r\n </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
8th
<lang forth> 2 base drop
- 50 . cr
</lang>
- Output:
110010
AArch64 Assembly
<lang AArch64 Assembly> /* ARM assembly AARCH64 Raspberry PI 3B */ /* program binarydigit.s */
/*******************************************/ /* Constantes file */ /*******************************************/ /* for this file see task include a file in language AArch64 assembly*/ .include "../includeConstantesARM64.inc"
/*******************************************/
/* Initialized data */
/*******************************************/
.data
sMessAffBindeb: .asciz "The decimal value "
sMessAffBin: .asciz " should produce an output of "
szRetourLigne: .asciz "\n"
/*******************************************/ /* Uninitialized data */ /*******************************************/ .bss sZoneConv: .skip 100 sZoneBin: .skip 100 /*******************************************/ /* code section */ /*******************************************/ .text .global main main: /* entry of program */
mov x5,5 mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneConv bl conversion10S mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneBin bl conversion2 // binary conversion and display résult ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBindeb bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneConv bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrszRetourLigne bl affichageMess /* other number */ mov x5,50 mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneConv bl conversion10S mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneBin bl conversion2 // binary conversion and display résult ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBindeb bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneConv bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrszRetourLigne bl affichageMess /* other number */ mov x5,-1 mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneConv bl conversion10S mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneBin bl conversion2 // binary conversion and display résult ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBindeb bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneConv bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrszRetourLigne bl affichageMess /* other number */ mov x5,1 mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneConv bl conversion10S mov x0,x5 ldr x1,qAdrsZoneBin bl conversion2 // binary conversion and display résult ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBindeb bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneConv bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsMessAffBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrsZoneBin bl affichageMess ldr x0,qAdrszRetourLigne bl affichageMess
100: // standard end of the program */
mov x0, #0 // return code mov x8, #EXIT // request to exit program svc 0 // perform the system call
qAdrsZoneConv: .quad sZoneConv qAdrsZoneBin: .quad sZoneBin qAdrsMessAffBin: .quad sMessAffBin qAdrsMessAffBindeb: .quad sMessAffBindeb qAdrszRetourLigne: .quad szRetourLigne /******************************************************************/ /* register conversion in binary */ /******************************************************************/ /* x0 contains the register */ /* x1 contains the address of receipt area */ conversion2:
stp x2,lr,[sp,-16]! // save registers stp x3,x4,[sp,-16]! // save registers clz x2,x0 // number of left zeros bits mov x3,64 sub x2,x3,x2 // number of significant bits strb wzr,[x1,x2] // store 0 final sub x3,x2,1 // position counter of the written character
2: // loop
tst x0,1 // test first bit lsr x0,x0,#1 // shift right one bit bne 3f mov x4,#48 // bit = 0 => character '0' b 4f
3:
mov x4,#49 // bit = 1 => character '1'
4:
strb w4,[x1,x3] // character in reception area at position counter sub x3,x3,#1 subs x2,x2,#1 // 0 bits ? bgt 2b // no! loop
100:
ldp x3,x4,[sp],16 // restaur 2 registres ldp x2,lr,[sp],16 // restaur 2 registres ret // retour adresse lr x30
/********************************************************/ /* File Include fonctions */ /********************************************************/ /* for this file see task include a file in language AArch64 assembly */ .include "../includeARM64.inc"
</lang>
- Output:
The decimal value +5 should produce an output of 101 The decimal value +50 should produce an output of 110010 The decimal value -1 should produce an output of 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 The decimal value +1 should produce an output of 1
ACL2
<lang Lisp>(include-book "arithmetic-3/top" :dir :system)
(defun bin-string-r (x)
(if (zp x) "" (string-append (bin-string-r (floor x 2)) (if (= 1 (mod x 2)) "1" "0"))))
(defun bin-string (x)
(if (zp x) "0" (bin-string-r x)))</lang>
Action!
<lang Action!>PROC PrintBinary(CARD v)
CHAR ARRAY a(16) BYTE i=[0]
DO a(i)=(v&1)+'0 i==+1 v=v RSH 1 UNTIL v=0 OD
DO i==-1 Put(a(i)) UNTIL i=0 OD
RETURN
PROC Main()
CARD ARRAY data=[0 5 50 9000] BYTE i CARD v
FOR i=0 TO 3 DO v=data(i) PrintF("Output for %I is ",v) PrintBinary(v) PutE() OD
RETURN</lang>
- Output:
Screenshot from Atari 8-bit computer
Output for 0 is 0 Output for 5 is 101 Output for 50 is 110010 Output for 9000 is 10001100101000
Ada
<lang Ada>with ada.text_io; use ada.text_io; procedure binary is
bit : array (0..1) of character := ('0','1');
function bin_image (n : Natural) return string is (if n < 2 then (1 => bit (n)) else bin_image (n / 2) & bit (n mod 2));
test_values : array (1..3) of Natural := (5,50,9000);
begin
for test of test_values loop
put_line ("Output for" & test'img & " is " & bin_image (test));
end loop;
end binary;</lang>
- Output:
Output for 5 is 101 Output for 50 is 110010 Output for 9000 is 10001100101000
Aime
<lang aime>o_xinteger(2, 0); o_byte('\n'); o_xinteger(2, 5); o_byte('\n'); o_xinteger(2, 50); o_byte('\n'); o_form("/x2/\n", 9000);</lang>
- Output:
0 101 110010 10001100101000
ALGOL 68
File: Binary_digits.a68<lang algol68>#!/usr/local/bin/a68g --script #
printf((
$g" => "2r3d l$, 5, BIN 5, $g" => "2r6d l$, 50, BIN 50, $g" => "2r14d l$, 9000, BIN 9000
));
- or coerce to an array of BOOL #
print((
5, " => ", []BOOL(BIN 5)[bits width-3+1:], new line, 50, " => ", []BOOL(BIN 50)[bits width-6+1:], new line, 9000, " => ", []BOOL(BIN 9000)[bits width-14+1:], new line
))</lang>
- Output:
+5 => 101 +50 => 110010 +9000 => 10001100101000 +5 => TFT +50 => TTFFTF +9000 => TFFFTTFFTFTFFF
ALGOL-M
<lang algolm>begin
procedure writebin(n); integer n; begin procedure inner(x); integer x; begin if x>1 then inner(x/2); writeon(if x-x/2*2=0 then "0" else "1"); end; write(""); % start new line % inner(n); end;
writebin(5); writebin(50); writebin(9000);
end</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
APL
Works in: Dyalog APL
A builtin function. Produces a boolean array. <lang apl>base2←2∘⊥⍣¯1</lang>
Works in: GNU APL
Produces a boolean array. <lang apl>base2 ← {((⌈2⍟⍵)⍴2)⊤⍵}</lang>
base2 5 1 0 1 base2 50 1 1 0 0 1 0 base2 9000 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0
ALGOL W
<lang algolw>begin
% prints an integer in binary - the number must be greater than zero % procedure printBinaryDigits( integer value n ) ; begin if n not = 0 then begin printBinaryDigits( n div 2 ); writeon( if n rem 2 = 1 then "1" else "0" ) end end binaryDigits ;
% prints an integer in binary - the number must not be negative % procedure printBinary( integer value n ) ; begin if n = 0 then writeon( "0" ) else printBinaryDigits( n ) end printBinary ;
% test the printBinaryDigits procedure % for i := 5, 50, 9000 do begin write(); printBinary( i ); end
end.</lang>
AppleScript
Functional
(ES6 version)
(The generic showIntAtBase here, which allows us to specify the digit set used (e.g. upper or lower case in hex, or different regional or other digit sets generally), is a rough translation of Haskell's Numeric.showintAtBase) <lang applescript>---------------------- BINARY STRING -----------------------
-- showBin :: Int -> String on showBin(n)
script binaryChar on |λ|(n) text item (n + 1) of "01" end |λ| end script showIntAtBase(2, binaryChar, n, "")
end showBin
TEST ---------------------------
on run
script on |λ|(n) intercalate(" -> ", {n as string, showBin(n)}) end |λ| end script return unlines(map(result, {5, 50, 9000}))
end run
GENERIC FUNCTIONS ---------------------
-- showIntAtBase :: Int -> (Int -> Char) -> Int -> String -> String on showIntAtBase(base, toChr, n, rs)
script showIt on |λ|(nd_, r) set {n, d} to nd_ set r_ to toChr's |λ|(d) & r if n > 0 then |λ|(quotRem(n, base), r_) else r_ end if end |λ| end script if base ≤ 1 then "error: showIntAtBase applied to unsupported base: " & base as string else if n < 0 then "error: showIntAtBase applied to negative number: " & base as string else showIt's |λ|(quotRem(n, base), rs) end if
end showIntAtBase
-- quotRem :: Integral a => a -> a -> (a, a)
on quotRem(m, n)
{m div n, m mod n}
end quotRem
GENERICS FOR TEST ---------------------
-- intercalate :: Text -> [Text] -> Text on intercalate(strText, lstText)
set {dlm, my text item delimiters} to {my text item delimiters, strText} set strJoined to lstText as text set my text item delimiters to dlm return strJoined
end intercalate
-- map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b]
on map(f, xs)
tell mReturn(f) set lng to length of xs set lst to {} repeat with i from 1 to lng set end of lst to |λ|(item i of xs, i, xs) end repeat return lst end tell
end map
-- Lift 2nd class handler function into 1st class script wrapper
-- mReturn :: Handler -> Script
on mReturn(f)
if class of f is script then f else script property |λ| : f end script end if
end mReturn
-- unlines :: [String] -> String on unlines(xs)
intercalate(linefeed, xs)
end unlines</lang>
5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Or using: <lang applescript>-- showBin :: Int -> String on showBin(n)
script binaryChar on |λ|(n) text item (n + 1) of "〇一" end |λ| end script showIntAtBase(2, binaryChar, n, "")
end showBin</lang>
- Output:
5 -> 一〇一 50 -> 一一〇〇一〇 9000 -> 一〇〇〇一一〇〇一〇一〇〇〇
Straightforward
At its very simplest, an AppleScript solution would look something like this:
<lang applescript>on intToBinary(n)
set binary to (n mod 2 div 1) as text set n to n div 2 repeat while (n > 0) set binary to ((n mod 2 div 1) as text) & binary set n to n div 2 end repeat return binary
end intToBinary
display dialog ¬
intToBinary(5) & linefeed & ¬ intToBinary(50) & linefeed & ¬ intToBinary(9000) & linefeed</lang>
Building a list of single-digit values instead and coercing that at the end can be a tad faster, but execution can be four or five times as fast when groups of text (or list) operations are replaced with arithmetic:
<lang applescript>on intToBinary(n)
set binary to "" repeat -- Calculate an integer value whose 8 decimal digits are the same as the low 8 binary digits of n's current value. set binAsDec to (n div 128 mod 2 * 10000000 + n div 64 mod 2 * 1000000 + n div 32 mod 2 * 100000 + ¬ n div 16 mod 2 * 10000 + n div 8 mod 2 * 1000 + n div 4 mod 2 * 100 + n div 2 mod 2 * 10 + n mod 2) div 1 -- Coerce to text as appropriate, prepend to the output text, and prepare to get another 8 digits or not as necessary. if (n > 255) then set binary to text 2 thru -1 of ((100000000 + binAsDec) as text) & binary set n to n div 256 else set binary to (binAsDec as text) & binary exit repeat end if end repeat return binary
end intToBinary
display dialog ¬
intToBinary(5) & linefeed & ¬ intToBinary(50) & linefeed & ¬ intToBinary(9000) & linefeed</lang>
ARM Assembly
<lang ARM Assembly>
/* ARM assembly Raspberry PI */ /* program binarydigit.s */
/* Constantes */ .equ STDOUT, 1 .equ WRITE, 4 .equ EXIT, 1 /* Initialized data */ .data
sMessAffBin: .ascii "The decimal value " sZoneDec: .space 12,' '
.ascii " should produce an output of "
sZoneBin: .space 36,' '
.asciz "\n"
/* code section */ .text .global main main: /* entry of program */
push {fp,lr} /* save des 2 registres */ mov r0,#5 ldr r1,iAdrsZoneDec bl conversion10S @ decimal conversion bl conversion2 @ binary conversion and display résult mov r0,#50 ldr r1,iAdrsZoneDec bl conversion10S bl conversion2 mov r0,#-1 ldr r1,iAdrsZoneDec bl conversion10S bl conversion2 mov r0,#1 ldr r1,iAdrsZoneDec bl conversion10S bl conversion2
100: /* standard end of the program */
mov r0, #0 @ return code pop {fp,lr} @restaur 2 registers mov r7, #EXIT @ request to exit program swi 0 @ perform the system call
iAdrsZoneDec: .int sZoneDec /******************************************************************/ /* register conversion in binary */ /******************************************************************/ /* r0 contains the register */ conversion2:
push {r0,lr} /* save registers */ push {r1-r5} /* save others registers */ ldr r1,iAdrsZoneBin @ address reception area clz r2,r0 @ number of left zeros bits rsb r2,#32 @ number of significant bits mov r4,#' ' @ space add r3,r2,#1 @ position counter in reception area
1:
strb r4,[r1,r3] @ space in other location of reception area add r3,#1 cmp r3,#32 @ end of area ? ble 1b @ no! loop mov r3,r2 @ position counter of the written character
2: @ loop
lsrs r0,#1 @ shift right one bit with flags movcc r4,#48 @ carry clear => character 0 movcs r4,#49 @ carry set => character 1 strb r4,[r1,r3] @ character in reception area at position counter sub r3,r3,#1 @ subs r2,r2,#1 @ 0 bits ? bgt 2b @ no! loop ldr r0,iAdrsZoneMessBin bl affichageMess
100:
pop {r1-r5} /* restaur others registers */ pop {r0,lr} bx lr
iAdrsZoneBin: .int sZoneBin iAdrsZoneMessBin: .int sMessAffBin
/******************************************************************/ /* display text with size calculation */ /******************************************************************/ /* r0 contains the address of the message */ affichageMess:
push {fp,lr} /* save registres */ push {r0,r1,r2,r7} /* save others registres */ mov r2,#0 /* counter length */
1: /* loop length calculation */
ldrb r1,[r0,r2] /* read octet start position + index */ cmp r1,#0 /* if 0 its over */ addne r2,r2,#1 /* else add 1 in the length */ bne 1b /* and loop */ /* so here r2 contains the length of the message */ mov r1,r0 /* address message in r1 */ mov r0,#STDOUT /* code to write to the standard output Linux */ mov r7, #WRITE /* code call system "write" */ swi #0 /* call systeme */ pop {r0,r1,r2,r7} /* restaur others registres */ pop {fp,lr} /* restaur des 2 registres */ bx lr /* return */
/***************************************************/ /* conversion registre en décimal signé */ /***************************************************/ /* r0 contient le registre */ /* r1 contient l adresse de la zone de conversion */ conversion10S:
push {fp,lr} /* save des 2 registres frame et retour */ push {r0-r5} /* save autres registres */ mov r2,r1 /* debut zone stockage */ mov r5,#'+' /* par defaut le signe est + */ cmp r0,#0 /* nombre négatif ? */ movlt r5,#'-' /* oui le signe est - */ mvnlt r0,r0 /* et inversion en valeur positive */ addlt r0,#1 mov r4,#10 /* longueur de la zone */
1: /* debut de boucle de conversion */
bl divisionpar10 /* division */ add r1,#48 /* ajout de 48 au reste pour conversion ascii */ strb r1,[r2,r4] /* stockage du byte en début de zone r5 + la position r4 */ sub r4,r4,#1 /* position précedente */ cmp r0,#0 bne 1b /* boucle si quotient different de zéro */ strb r5,[r2,r4] /* stockage du signe à la position courante */ subs r4,r4,#1 /* position précedente */ blt 100f /* si r4 < 0 fin */ /* sinon il faut completer le debut de la zone avec des blancs */ mov r3,#' ' /* caractere espace */
2:
strb r3,[r2,r4] /* stockage du byte */ subs r4,r4,#1 /* position précedente */ bge 2b /* boucle si r4 plus grand ou egal a zero */
100: /* fin standard de la fonction */
pop {r0-r5} /*restaur des autres registres */ pop {fp,lr} /* restaur des 2 registres frame et retour */ bx lr
/***************************************************/ /* division par 10 signé */ /* Thanks to http://thinkingeek.com/arm-assembler-raspberry-pi/* /* and http://www.hackersdelight.org/ */ /***************************************************/ /* r0 contient le dividende */ /* r0 retourne le quotient */ /* r1 retourne le reste */ divisionpar10:
/* r0 contains the argument to be divided by 10 */ push {r2-r4} /* save others registers */ mov r4,r0 ldr r3, .Ls_magic_number_10 /* r1 <- magic_number */ smull r1, r2, r3, r0 /* r1 <- Lower32Bits(r1*r0). r2 <- Upper32Bits(r1*r0) */ mov r2, r2, ASR #2 /* r2 <- r2 >> 2 */ mov r1, r0, LSR #31 /* r1 <- r0 >> 31 */ add r0, r2, r1 /* r0 <- r2 + r1 */ add r2,r0,r0, lsl #2 /* r2 <- r0 * 5 */ sub r1,r4,r2, lsl #1 /* r1 <- r4 - (r2 * 2) = r4 - (r0 * 10) */ pop {r2-r4} bx lr /* leave function */ .align 4
.Ls_magic_number_10: .word 0x66666667
</lang>
Arturo
<lang rebol>print as.binary 5 print as.binary 50 print as.binary 9000</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
AutoHotkey
<lang AutoHotkey>MsgBox % NumberToBinary(5) ;101 MsgBox % NumberToBinary(50) ;110010 MsgBox % NumberToBinary(9000) ;10001100101000
NumberToBinary(InputNumber) {
While, InputNumber Result := (InputNumber & 1) . Result, InputNumber >>= 1 Return, Result
}</lang>
AutoIt
<lang autoit> ConsoleWrite(IntToBin(50) & @CRLF)
Func IntToBin($iInt) $Stack = ObjCreate("System.Collections.Stack") Local $b = -1, $r = "" While $iInt <> 0 $b = Mod($iInt, 2) $iInt = INT($iInt/2) $Stack.Push ($b) WEnd For $i = 1 TO $Stack.Count $r &= $Stack.Pop Next Return $r EndFunc ;==>IntToBin </lang>
AWK
<lang awk>BEGIN {
print tobinary(5) print tobinary(50) print tobinary(9000)
}
function tobinary(num) {
outstr = "" l = num while ( l ) { if ( l%2 == 0 ) { outstr = "0" outstr } else { outstr = "1" outstr } l = int(l/2) } # Make sure we output a zero for a value of zero if ( outstr == "" ) { outstr = "0" } return outstr
}</lang>
Axe
This example builds a string backwards to ensure the digits are displayed in the correct order. It uses bitwise logic to extract one bit at a time. <lang axe>Lbl BIN .Axe supports 16-bit integers, so 16 digits are enough L₁+16→P 0→{P} While r₁
P-- {(r₁ and 1)▶Hex+3}→P r₁/2→r₁
End Disp P,i Return</lang>
BaCon
<lang freebasic>' Binary digits OPTION MEMTYPE int INPUT n$ IF VAL(n$) = 0 THEN
PRINT "0"
ELSE
PRINT CHOP$(BIN$(VAL(n$)), "0", 1)
ENDIF</lang>
BASIC
Applesoft BASIC
<lang ApplesoftBasic> 0 N = 5: GOSUB 1:N = 50: GOSUB 1:N = 9000: GOSUB 1: END
1 LET N2 = ABS ( INT (N)) 2 LET B$ = "" 3 FOR N1 = N2 TO 0 STEP 0 4 LET N2 = INT (N1 / 2) 5 LET B$ = STR$ (N1 - N2 * 2) + B$ 6 LET N1 = N2 7 NEXT N1 8 PRINT B$ 9 RETURN</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
BASIC256
<lang basic256>
- DecToBin.bas
- BASIC256 1.1.4.0
dim a(3) #dimension a 3 element array (a)
a = {5, 50, 9000}
for i = 0 to 2
print a[i] + chr(9) + toRadix(a[i],2) # radix (decimal, base2)
next i </lang>
- Output:
5 101 50 110010 9000 10001100101000
BBC BASIC
<lang bbcbasic> FOR num% = 0 TO 16
PRINT FN_tobase(num%, 2, 0) NEXT END REM Convert N% to string in base B% with minimum M% digits: DEF FN_tobase(N%,B%,M%) LOCAL D%,A$ REPEAT D% = N%MODB% N% DIV= B% IF D%<0 D% += B%:N% -= 1 A$ = CHR$(48 + D% - 7*(D%>9)) + A$ M% -= 1 UNTIL (N%=FALSE OR N%=TRUE) AND M%<=0 =A$</lang>
The above is a generic "Convert to any base" program. Here is a faster "Convert to Binary" program: <lang bbcbasic>PRINT FNbinary(5) PRINT FNbinary(50) PRINT FNbinary(9000) END
DEF FNbinary(N%) LOCAL A$ REPEAT
A$ = STR$(N% AND 1) + A$ N% = N% >>> 1 : REM BBC Basic prior to V5 can use N% = N% DIV 2
UNTIL N% = 0 =A$</lang>
Commodore BASIC
<lang commodorebasic>10 N = 5 : GOSUB 100 20 N = 50 : GOSUB 100 30 N = 9000 : GOSUB 100 40 END 90 REM *** SUBROUTINE: CONVERT DECIMAL TO BINARY 100 N2 = ABS(INT(N)) 110 B$ = "" 120 FOR N1 = N2 TO 0 STEP 0 130 : N2 = INT(N1 / 2) 140 : B$ = STR$(N1 - N2 * 2) + B$ 150 : N1 = N2 160 NEXT N1 170 PRINT B$ 180 RETURN</lang>
IS-BASIC
<lang IS-BASIC>10 PRINT BIN$(50) 100 DEF BIN$(N) 110 LET N=ABS(INT(N)):LET B$="" 120 DO 140 LET B$=STR$(MOD(N,2))&B$:LET N=INT(N/2) 150 LOOP WHILE N>0 160 LET BIN$=B$ 170 END DEF</lang>
Tiny BASIC
This turns into a horrible mess because of the lack of string concatenation in print statements, and the necessity of suppressing leading zeroes. <lang tinybasic}}>REM variables: REM A-O: binary digits with A least significant and N most significant REM X: number whose binary expansion we want REM Z: running value
INPUT X LET Z = X IF Z = 0 THEN GOTO 999 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET A = 1 LET Z = (Z - A) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET B = 1 LET Z = (Z - B) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET C = 1 LET Z = (Z - C) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET D = 1 LET Z = (Z - D) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET E = 1 LET Z = (Z - E) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET F = 1 LET Z = (Z - F) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET G = 1 LET Z = (Z - G) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET H = 1 REM THIS IS ALL VERY TEDIOUS LET Z = (Z - H) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET I = 1 LET Z = (Z - I) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET J = 1 LET Z = (Z - J) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET K = 1 LET Z = (Z - K) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET L = 1 LET Z = (Z - L) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET M = 1 LET Z = (Z - M) / 2 IF (Z/2)*2<>Z THEN LET N = 1 LET Z = (Z - N) / 2 LET O = Z IF X >= 16384 THEN GOTO 114 IF X >= 8192 THEN GOTO 113 IF X >= 4096 THEN GOTO 112 IF X >= 2048 THEN GOTO 111 IF X >= 1024 THEN GOTO 110 IF X >= 512 THEN GOTO 109 IF X >= 256 THEN GOTO 108 IF X >= 128 THEN GOTO 107 REM THIS IS ALSO TEDIOUS IF X >= 64 THEN GOTO 106 IF X >= 32 THEN GOTO 105 IF X >= 16 THEN GOTO 104 IF X >= 8 THEN GOTO 103 IF X >= 4 THEN GOTO 102 IF X >= 2 THEN GOTO 101 PRINT 1 END
101 PRINT B,A
END
102 PRINT C,B,A
END
103 PRINT D,C,B,A
END
104 PRINT E,D,C,B,A
END
105 PRINT F,E,D,C,B,A
END
106 PRINT G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
107 PRINT H,G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
108 PRINT I,H,G,D,E,D,C,B,A
END
109 PRINT J,I,H,G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
110 PRINT K,J,I,H,G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
111 PRINT L,K,J,I,H,G,D,E,D,C,B,A
END
112 PRINT M,L,K,J,I,H,G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
113 PRINT N,M,L,K,J,I,H,G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
114 PRINT O,N,M,L,K,J,I,H,G,F,E,D,C,B,A
END
999 PRINT 0 REM zero is the one time we DO want to print a leading zero
END</lang>
Bash
<lang BASH> function to_binary () {
if [ $1 -ge 0 ] then val=$1 binary_digits=()
while [ $val -gt 0 ]; do bit=$((val % 2)) quotient=$((val / 2)) binary_digits+=("${bit}") val=$quotient done echo "${binary_digits[*]}" | rev else echo ERROR : "negative number" exit 1 fi
}
array=(5 50 9000) for number in "${array[@]}"; do
echo $number " :> " $(to_binary $number)
done </lang>
- Output:
5 :> 1 0 1 50 :> 1 1 0 0 1 0 9000 :> 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0
Batch File
This num2bin.bat file handles non-negative input as per the requirements with no leading zeros in the output. Batch only supports signed integers. This script also handles negative values by printing the appropriate two's complement notation. <lang dos>@echo off
- num2bin IntVal [RtnVar]
setlocal enableDelayedExpansion set /a n=%~1 set rtn= for /l %%b in (0,1,31) do ( set /a "d=n&1, n>>=1" set rtn=!d!!rtn! ) for /f "tokens=* delims=0" %%a in ("!rtn!") do set rtn=%%a (endlocal & rem -- return values if "%~2" neq "" (set %~2=%rtn%) else echo %rtn% )
exit /b</lang>
bc
<lang bc>obase = 2 5 50 9000 quit</lang>
BCPL
<lang bcpl>get "libhdr"
let writebin(x) be $( let f(x) be
$( if x>1 then f(x>>1) wrch((x & 1) + '0') $) f(x) wrch('*N')
$)
let start() be $( writebin(5)
writebin(50) writebin(9000)
$)</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Beads
<lang Beads>beads 1 program 'Binary Digits' calc main_init loop across:[5, 50, 9000] val:v log to_str(v, base:2)</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Befunge
Reads the number to convert from standard input. <lang befunge>&>0\55+\:2%68>*#<+#8\#62#%/#2:_$>:#,_$@</lang>
- Output:
9000 10001100101000
BQN
A BQNcrate idiom which returns the digits as a boolean array. <lang bqn>Bin ← 2{⌽𝕗|⌊∘÷⟜𝕗⍟(↕1+·⌊𝕗⋆⁼1⌈⊢)}
Bin¨5‿50‿9000</lang><lang>⟨ ⟨ 1 0 1 ⟩ ⟨ 1 1 0 0 1 0 ⟩ ⟨ 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 ⟩ ⟩</lang>
Bracmat
<lang bracmat> ( dec2bin
= bit bits . :?bits & whl ' ( !arg:>0 & mod$(!arg,2):?bit & div$(!arg,2):?arg & !bit !bits:?bits ) & (str$!bits:~|0) )
& 0 5 50 9000 423785674235000123456789:?numbers & whl
' ( !numbers:%?dec ?numbers & put$(str$(!dec ":\n" dec2bin$!dec \n\n)) )
- </lang>
- Output:
0: 0 5: 101 50: 110010 9000: 10001100101000 423785674235000123456789: 1011001101111010111011110101001101111000000000000110001100000100111110100010101
Brainf***
This is almost an exact duplicate of Count in octal#Brainf***. It outputs binary numbers until it is forced to terminate or the counter overflows to 0.
<lang bf>+[ Start with n=1 to kick off the loop [>>++<< Set up {n 0 2} for divmod magic [->+>- Then [>+>>]> do [+[-<+>]>+>>] the <<<<<<] magic >>>+ Increment n % 2 so that 0s don't break things >] Move into n / 2 and divmod that unless it's 0 -< Set up sentinel ‑1 then move into the first binary digit [++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++ Add 47 to get it to ASCII
++++++++ ++++++++ +++++++. and print it
[<]<] Get to a 0; the cell to the left is the next binary digit >>[<+>-] Tape is {0 n}; make it {n 0} >[>+] Get to the ‑1 <[[-]<] Zero the tape for the next iteration ++++++++++. Print a newline [-]<+] Zero it then increment n and go again</lang>
Burlesque
<lang burlesque> blsq ) {5 50 9000}{2B!}m[uN 101 110010 10001100101000 </lang>
C
With bit level operations
<lang C>#define _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS // turn off panic warnings
- define _CRT_NONSTDC_NO_DEPRECATE // enable old-gold POSIX names in MSVS
- include <stdio.h>
- include <stdlib.h>
char* bin2str(unsigned value, char* buffer)
{
// This algorithm is not the fastest one, but is relativelly simple. // A faster algorithm: convert octets by lookup.
const unsigned N_DIGITS = sizeof(unsigned) * 8; unsigned mask = 1 << (N_DIGITS - 1); char* ptr = buffer;
for (int i = 0; i < N_DIGITS; i++) { *ptr++ = '0' + !!(value & mask); mask >>= 1; } *ptr = '\0';
// Remove leading zeros. // for (ptr = buffer; *ptr == '0'; ptr++) ;
return ptr;
}
char* bin2strNaive(unsigned value, char* buffer)
{
// This variation of the solution doesn't use operations on bits.
unsigned n, m, p;
n = 0; p = 1; // p = 2 ** (n - 1) while (p <= value / 2) { n = n + 1; p = p * 2; }
m = 0; while (n > 0) { buffer[m] = '0' + value / p; value = value % p; m = m + 1; n = n - 1; p = p / 2; }
buffer[m + 1] = '\0'; return buffer;
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
const unsigned NUMBERS[] = { 5, 50, 9000 };
const int RADIX = 2; char buffer[(sizeof(unsigned)*8 + 1)];
// Function itoa is an POSIX function, but it is not in C standard library. // There is no big surprise that Microsoft deprecate itoa because POSIX is // "Portable Operating System Interface for UNIX". Thus it is not a good // idea to use _itoa which is neither POSIX nor liked by Microsoft. // for (int i = 0; i < sizeof(NUMBERS) / sizeof(unsigned); i++) { unsigned value = NUMBERS[i]; itoa(value, buffer, RADIX); printf("itoa: %u decimal = %s binary\n", value, buffer); }
// Yeep, we can use a homemade bin2str function. Notice that C is very very // efficient (as "hi level assembler") when bit manipulation is needed. // for (int i = 0; i < sizeof(NUMBERS) / sizeof(unsigned); i++) { unsigned value = NUMBERS[i]; _itoa(value, buffer, RADIX); printf("bin2str: %u decimal = %s binary\n", value, bin2str(value, buffer)); }
// Another implementation - see above. // for (int i = 0; i < sizeof(NUMBERS) / sizeof(unsigned); i++) { unsigned value = NUMBERS[i]; _itoa(value, buffer, RADIX); printf("bin2strNaive: %u decimal = %s binary\n", value, bin2strNaive(value, buffer)); }
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
} </lang>
- Output:
itoa: 5 decimal = 101 binary itoa: 50 decimal = 110010 binary itoa: 9000 decimal = 10001100101000 binary bin2str: 5 decimal = 101 binary bin2str: 50 decimal = 110010 binary bin2str: 9000 decimal = 10001100101000 binary bin2strNaive: 5 decimal = 101 binary bin2strNaive: 50 decimal = 110010 binary bin2strNaive: 9000 decimal = 10001100101000 binary
With malloc and log10
Converts int to a string. <lang c>#include <math.h>
- include <stdio.h>
- include <stdlib.h>
- include <stdint.h>
char *bin(uint32_t x);
int main(void) {
for (size_t i = 0; i < 20; i++) { char *binstr = bin(i); printf("%s\n", binstr); free(binstr); }
}
char *bin(uint32_t x) {
size_t bits = (x == 0) ? 1 : log10((double) x)/log10(2) + 1; char *ret = malloc((bits + 1) * sizeof (char)); for (size_t i = 0; i < bits ; i++) { ret[bits - i - 1] = (x & 1) ? '1' : '0'; x >>= 1; } ret[bits] = '\0'; return ret;
}</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 10000 10001 10010 10011
C#
<lang csharp>using System;
class Program {
static void Main() { foreach (var number in new[] { 5, 50, 9000 }) { Console.WriteLine(Convert.ToString(number, 2)); } }
}</lang> Another version using dotnet 5<lang csharp dotnet 5.0>using System; using System.Text;
static string ToBinary(uint x) {
if(x == 0) return "0"; var bin = new StringBuilder(); for(uint mask = (uint)1 << (sizeof(uint)*8 - 1);mask > 0;mask = mask >> 1) bin.Append((mask & x) > 0 ? "1" : "0"); return bin.ToString().TrimStart('0');
}
Console.WriteLine(ToBinary(5)); Console.WriteLine(ToBinary(50)); Console.WriteLine(ToBinary(9000));</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
C++
<lang cpp>#include <bitset>
- include <iostream>
- include <limits>
- include <string>
void print_bin(unsigned int n) {
std::string str = "0";
if (n > 0) { str = std::bitset<std::numeric_limits<unsigned int>::digits>(n).to_string(); str = str.substr(str.find('1')); // remove leading zeros } std::cout << str << '\n';
}
int main() {
print_bin(0); print_bin(5); print_bin(50); print_bin(9000);
} </lang>
- Output:
0 101 110010 10001100101000
Shorter version using bitset <lang cpp>#include <iostream>
- include <bitset>
void printBits(int n) { // Use int like most programming languages.
int iExp = 0; // Bit-length while (n >> iExp) ++iExp; // Could use template <log(x)*1.44269504088896340736> for (int at = iExp - 1; at >= 0; at--) // Reverse iter from the bit-length to 0 - msb is at end std::cout << std::bitset<32>(n)[at]; // Show 1's, show lsb, hide leading zeros std::cout << '\n';
} int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
printBits(5); printBits(50); printBits(9000);
} // for testing with n=0 printBits<32>(0);</lang> Using >> operator. (1st example is 2.75x longer. Matter of taste.) <lang cpp>#include <iostream> int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
unsigned int in[] = {5, 50, 9000}; // Use int like most programming languages for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++) // Use all inputs for (int at = 31; at >= 0; at--) // reverse iteration from the max bit-length to 0, because msb is at the end if (int b = (in[i] >> at)) // skip leading zeros. Start output when significant bits are set std::cout << ('0' + b & 1) << (!at ? "\n": ""); // '0' or '1'. Add EOL if last bit of num
} </lang> To be fair comparison with languages that doesn't declare a function like C++ main(). 3.14x shorter than 1st example. <lang cpp>#include <iostream> int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { // Usage: program.exe 5 50 9000
for (int i = 1; i < argc; i++) // argv[0] is program name for (int at = 31; at >= 0; at--) // reverse iteration from the max bit-length to 0, because msb is at the end if (int b = (atoi(argv[i]) >> at)) // skip leading zeros std::cout << ('0' + b & 1) << (!at ? "\n": ""); // '0' or '1'. Add EOL if last bit of num
} </lang> Using bitwise operations with recursion. <lang cpp>
- include <iostream>
std::string binary(int n) {
return n == 0 ? "" : binary(n >> 1) + std::to_string(n & 1);
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
for (int i = 1; i < argc; ++i) { std::cout << binary(std::stoi(argv[i])) << std::endl; }
} </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Ceylon
<lang ceylon> shared void run() {
void printBinary(Integer integer) => print(Integer.format(integer, 2)); printBinary(5); printBinary(50); printBinary(9k); }</lang>
Clojure
<lang clojure>(Integer/toBinaryString 5) (Integer/toBinaryString 50) (Integer/toBinaryString 9000)</lang>
CLU
<lang clu>binary = proc (n: int) returns (string)
bin: string := "" while n > 0 do bin := string$c2s(char$i2c(48 + n // 2)) || bin n := n / 2 end return(bin)
end binary
start_up = proc ()
po: stream := stream$primary_output() tests: array[int] := array[int]$[5, 50, 9000] for test: int in array[int]$elements(tests) do stream$putl(po, int$unparse(test) || " -> " || binary(test)) end
end start_up</lang>
- Output:
5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
COBOL
<lang COBOL> IDENTIFICATION DIVISION.
PROGRAM-ID. SAMPLE.
DATA DIVISION. WORKING-STORAGE SECTION.
01 binary_number pic X(21). 01 str pic X(21). 01 binary_digit pic X. 01 digit pic 9. 01 n pic 9(7). 01 nstr pic X(7).
PROCEDURE DIVISION. accept nstr move nstr to n perform until n equal 0 divide n by 2 giving n remainder digit move digit to binary_digit string binary_digit DELIMITED BY SIZE binary_number DELIMITED BY SPACE into str move str to binary_number end-perform. display binary_number stop run.
</lang> Free-form, using a reference modifier to index into binary-number. <lang cobol>IDENTIFICATION DIVISION. PROGRAM-ID. binary-conversion.
DATA DIVISION. WORKING-STORAGE SECTION. 01 binary-number pic X(21). 01 digit pic 9. 01 n pic 9(7). 01 nstr pic X(7). 01 ptr pic 99.
PROCEDURE DIVISION. display "Number: " with no advancing. accept nstr. move nstr to n. move zeroes to binary-number. move length binary-number to ptr. perform until n equal 0 divide n by 2 giving n remainder digit move digit to binary-number(ptr:1) subtract 1 from ptr if ptr < 1 exit perform end-if end-perform. display binary-number. stop run.</lang>
CoffeeScript
<lang coffeescript>binary = (n) ->
new Number(n).toString(2)
console.log binary n for n in [5, 50, 9000]</lang>
Common Lisp
Just print the number with "~b": <lang lisp>(format t "~b" 5)
- or
(write 5 :base 2)</lang>
Component Pascal
BlackBox Component Builder <lang oberon2> MODULE BinaryDigits; IMPORT StdLog,Strings;
PROCEDURE Do*;
VAR
str : ARRAY 33 OF CHAR;
BEGIN
Strings.IntToStringForm(5,2, 1,'0',FALSE,str);
StdLog.Int(5);StdLog.String(":> " + str);StdLog.Ln;
Strings.IntToStringForm(50,2, 1,'0',FALSE,str);
StdLog.Int(50);StdLog.String(":> " + str);StdLog.Ln;
Strings.IntToStringForm(9000,2, 1,'0',FALSE,str);
StdLog.Int(9000);StdLog.String(":> " + str);StdLog.Ln;
END Do;
END BinaryDigits.
</lang>
Execute: ^Q BinaryDigits.Do
- Output:
5:> 101 50:> 110010 9000:> 10001100101000
Cowgol
<lang cowgol>include "cowgol.coh";
sub print_binary(n: uint32) is
var buffer: uint8[33]; var p := &buffer[32]; [p] := 0; while n != 0 loop p := @prev p; [p] := ((n as uint8) & 1) + '0'; n := n >> 1; end loop; print(p); print_nl();
end sub;
print_binary(5); print_binary(50); print_binary(9000);</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Crystal
Using an array <lang ruby>[5,50,9000].each do |n|
puts "%b" % n
end</lang> Using a tuple <lang ruby>{5,50,9000}.each { |n| puts n.to_s(2) }</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
D
<lang d>void main() {
import std.stdio;
foreach (immutable i; 0 .. 16) writefln("%b", i);
}</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
Dart
<lang dart>String binary(int n) {
if(n<0) throw new IllegalArgumentException("negative numbers require 2s complement"); if(n==0) return "0"; String res=""; while(n>0) { res=(n%2).toString()+res; n=(n/2).toInt(); } return res;
}
main() {
print(binary(0)); print(binary(1)); print(binary(5)); print(binary(10)); print(binary(50)); print(binary(9000)); print(binary(65535)); print(binary(0xaa5511ff)); print(binary(0x123456789abcde)); // fails due to precision limit print(binary(0x123456789abcdef));
}</lang>
dc
<lang dc>2o 5p 50p 9000p</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Delphi
<lang Delphi> program BinaryDigit; {$APPTYPE CONSOLE} uses
sysutils;
function IntToBinStr(AInt : LongWord) : string; begin
Result := ; repeat Result := Chr(Ord('0')+(AInt and 1))+Result; AInt := AInt div 2; until (AInt = 0);
end;
Begin
writeln(' 5: ',IntToBinStr(5)); writeln(' 50: ',IntToBinStr(50)); writeln('9000: '+IntToBinStr(9000));
end.</lang>
- Output:
5: 101 50: 110010 9000: 10001100101000
Dyalect
A default toString
method of type Integer
is overriden and returns a binary representation of a number:
<lang dyalect>func Integer.toString() {
var s = "" for x in 31^-1..0 { if this &&& (1 <<< x) != 0 { s += "1" } else if s != "" { s += "0" } } s
}
print("5 == \(5), 50 = \(50), 1000 = \(9000)")</lang>
- Output:
5 == 101, 50 = 110010, 1000 = 10001100101000
EasyLang
<lang>func to2 n . r$ .
if n > 0 call to2 n div 2 r$ if n mod 2 = 0 r$ &= "0" else r$ &= "1" . else r$ = "" .
. func pr2 n . .
call to2 n r$ if r$ = "" print "0" else print r$ .
. call pr2 5 call pr2 50 call pr2 9000</lang>
101 110010 10001100101000
EchoLisp
<lang scheme>
- primitive
- (number->string number [base]) - default base = 10
(number->string 2 2) → 10
(for-each (compose writeln (rcurry number->string 2)) '( 5 50 9000)) → 101 110010 10001100101000 </lang>
Elena
ELENA 5.0 : <lang elena>import system'routines; import extensions;
public program() {
new int[]{5,50,9000}.forEach:(n) { console.printLine(n.toString(2)) }
}</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Elixir
Use Integer.to_string
with a base of 2:
<lang Elixir>
IO.puts Integer.to_string(5,2)
</lang>
Or, using the pipe operator:
<lang Elixir>
5 |> Integer.to_string(2) |> IO.puts
</lang>
<lang Elixir>
[5,50,9000] |> Enum.each(fn n -> IO.puts Integer.to_string(n,2) end)
</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Erlang
<lang erlang>lists:map( fun(N) -> io:fwrite("~.2B~n", [N]) end, [5, 50, 9000]). </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Euphoria
<lang euphoria>function toBinary(integer i)
sequence s s = {} while i do s = prepend(s, '0'+and_bits(i,1)) i = floor(i/2) end while return s
end function
puts(1, toBinary(5) & '\n') puts(1, toBinary(50) & '\n') puts(1, toBinary(9000) & '\n')</lang>
Functional/Recursive
<lang euphoria>include std/math.e include std/convert.e
function Bin(integer n, sequence s = "")
if n > 0 then return Bin(floor(n/2),(mod(n,2) + #30) & s) end if if length(s) = 0 then return to_integer("0") end if return to_integer(s)
end function
printf(1, "%d\n", Bin(5)) printf(1, "%d\n", Bin(50)) printf(1, "%d\n", Bin(9000))</lang>
F#
By translating C#'s approach, using imperative coding style (inflexible): <lang FSharp>open System for i in [5; 50; 9000] do printfn "%s" <| Convert.ToString (i, 2)</lang>
Alternatively, by creating a function printBin
which prints in binary (more flexible):
<lang FSharp>open System
// define the function let printBin (i: int) =
Convert.ToString (i, 2) |> printfn "%s"
// use the function [5; 50; 9000] |> List.iter printBin</lang>
Or more idiomatic so that you can use it with any printf-style function and the %a
format specifier (most flexible):
<lang FSharp>open System open System.IO
// define a callback function for %a let bin (tw: TextWriter) value =
tw.Write("{0}", Convert.ToString(int64 value, 2))
// use it with printfn with %a [5; 50; 9000] |> List.iter (printfn "binary: %a" bin)</lang> Output (either version):
101 110010 10001100101000
Factor
<lang factor>USING: io kernel math math.parser ;
5 >bin print 50 >bin print 9000 >bin print</lang>
FALSE
<lang false>[0\10\[$1&'0+\2/$][]#%[$][,]#%]b:
5 b;! 50 b;! 9000 b;!</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
FBSL
<lang fbsl>#AppType Console function Bin(byval n as integer, byval s as string = "") as string if n > 0 then return Bin(n \ 2, (n mod 2) & s) if s = "" then return "0" return s end function
print Bin(5) print Bin(50) print Bin(9000)
pause </lang>
FOCAL
<lang FOCAL>01.10 S A=5;D 2 01.20 S A=50;D 2 01.30 S A=9000;D 2 01.40 Q
02.10 S BX=0 02.20 S BD(BX)=A-FITR(A/2)*2 02.25 S A=FITR(A/2) 02.30 S BX=BX+1 02.35 I (-A)2.2 02.40 S BX=BX-1 02.45 D 2.6 02.50 I (-BX)2.4;T !;R 02.60 I (-BD(BX))2.7;T "0";R 02.70 T "1"</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Forth
<lang forth>\ Forth uses a system variable 'BASE' for number conversion
\ HEX is a standard word to change the value of base to 16 \ DECIMAL is a standard word to change the value of base to 10
\ we can easily compile a word into the system to set 'BASE' to 2
: binary 2 base ! ;
\ interactive console test with conversion and binary masking example
hex 0FF binary . cr decimal 679 binary . cr
binary 11111111111 00000110000 and . cr
decimal
</lang>
- Output:
11111111 1010100111 110000
Fortran
Please find compilation instructions and the example run at the start of the FORTRAN90 source that follows. Thank you. <lang FORTRAN> !-*- mode: compilation; default-directory: "/tmp/" -*- !Compilation started at Sun May 19 23:14:14 ! !a=./F && make $a && $a < unixdict.txt !f95 -Wall -ffree-form F.F -o F !101 !110010 !10001100101000 ! !Compilation finished at Sun May 19 23:14:14 ! ! ! tobin=: -.&' '@":@#: ! tobin 5 !101 ! tobin 50 !110010 ! tobin 9000 !10001100101000
program bits
implicit none integer, dimension(3) :: a integer :: i data a/5,50,9000/ do i = 1, 3 call s(a(i)) enddo
contains
subroutine s(a) integer, intent(in) :: a integer :: i if (a .eq. 0) then write(6,'(a)')'0' return endif do i = 31, 0, -1 if (btest(a, i)) exit enddo do while (0 .lt. i) if (btest(a, i)) then write(6,'(a)',advance='no')'1' else write(6,'(a)',advance='no')'0' endif i = i-1 enddo if (btest(a, i)) then write(6,'(a)')'1' else write(6,'(a)')'0' endif end subroutine s
end program bits </lang>
Free Pascal
As part of the RTL (run-time library) that is shipped with every FPC (Free Pascal compiler) distribution, the system unit contains the function binStr. The system unit is automatically included by every program and is guaranteed to work on every supported platform. <lang pascal>program binaryDigits(input, output, stdErr); {$mode ISO}
function binaryNumber(const value: nativeUInt): shortString; const one = '1'; var representation: shortString; begin representation := binStr(value, bitSizeOf(value)); // strip leading zeroes, if any; NB: mod has to be ISO compliant delete(representation, 1, (pos(one, representation)-1) mod bitSizeOf(value)); // traditional Pascal fashion: // assign result to the (implicitely existent) variable // that is named like the function’s name binaryNumber := representation; end;
begin writeLn(binaryNumber(5)); writeLn(binaryNumber(50)); writeLn(binaryNumber(9000)); end.</lang> Note, that the ISO compliant mod operation has to be used, which is ensured by the {$mode} directive in the second line.
FreeBASIC
<lang freebasic> ' FreeBASIC v1.05.0 win64 Dim As String fmt = "#### -> &" Print Using fmt; 5; Bin(5) Print Using fmt; 50; Bin(50) Print Using fmt; 9000; Bin(9000) Print Print "Press any key to exit the program" Sleep End </lang>
- Output:
5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Frink
The following all provide equivalent output. Input can be arbitrarily-large integers. <lang frink> 9000 -> binary 9000 -> base2 base2[9000] base[9000, 2] </lang>
FunL
<lang funl>for n <- [5, 50, 9000, 9000000000]
println( n, bin(n) )</lang>
- Output:
5, 101 50, 110010 9000, 10001100101000 9000000000, 1000011000011100010001101000000000
Futhark
We produce the binary number as a 64-bit integer whose digits are all 0s and 1s - this is because Futhark does not have any way to print, nor strings for that matter.
<lang Futhark> fun main(x: i32): i64 =
loop (out = 0i64) = for i < 32 do let digit = (x >> (31-i)) & 1 let out = (out * 10i64) + i64(digit) in out in out
</lang>
Gambas
Click this link to run this code <lang gambas>Public Sub Main() Dim siBin As Short[] = [5, 50, 9000] Dim siCount As Short
For siCount = 0 To siBin.Max
Print Bin(siBin[siCount])
Next
End</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Go
<lang go>package main
import ( "fmt" )
func main() { for i := 0; i < 16; i++ { fmt.Printf("%b\n", i) } }</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
Groovy
Solutions: <lang groovy>print
n binary
---------------
[5, 50, 9000].each {
printf('%5d %15s\n', it, Integer.toBinaryString(it))
}</lang>
- Output:
n binary ----- --------------- 5 101 50 110010 9000 10001100101000
Haskell
<lang haskell>import Data.List import Numeric import Text.Printf
-- Use the built-in function showIntAtBase. toBin n = showIntAtBase 2 ("01" !!) n ""
-- Implement our own version. toBin1 0 = [] toBin1 x = (toBin1 $ x `div` 2) ++ (show $ x `mod` 2)
-- Or even more efficient (due to fusion) and universal implementation toBin2 = foldMap show . reverse . toBase 2
toBase base = unfoldr modDiv
where modDiv 0 = Nothing modDiv n = let (q, r) = (n `divMod` base) in Just (r, q)
printToBin n = putStrLn $ printf "%4d %14s %14s" n (toBin n) (toBin1 n)
main = do
putStrLn $ printf "%4s %14s %14s" "N" "toBin" "toBin1" mapM_ printToBin [5, 50, 9000]</lang>
- Output:
N toBin toBin1 5 101 101 50 110010 110010 9000 10001100101000 10001100101000
and in terms of first and swap, we could also write this as:
<lang haskell>import Data.Bifunctor (first) import Data.List (unfoldr) import Data.Tuple (swap)
BINARY DIGITS ---------------------
binaryDigits :: Int -> String binaryDigits = reverse . unfoldr go
where go 0 = Nothing go n = Just . first ("01" !!) . swap . quotRem n $ 2
TEST -------------------------
main :: IO () main =
mapM_ ( putStrLn . ( ((<>) . (<> " -> ") . show) <*> binaryDigits ) ) [5, 50, 9000]</lang>
- Output:
5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Icon and Unicon
There is no built-in way to output the bit string representation of an whole number in Icon and Unicon. There are generalized radix conversion routines in the Icon Programming Library that comes with every distribution. This procedure is a customized conversion routine that will populate and use a tunable cache as it goes. <lang Icon>procedure main() every i := 5 | 50 | 255 | 1285 | 9000 do
write(i," = ",binary(i))
end
procedure binary(n) #: return bitstring for integer n static CT, cm, cb initial {
CT := table() # cache table for results cm := 2 ^ (cb := 4) # (tunable) cache modulus & pad bits }
b := "" # build reversed bit string while n > 0 do { # use cached result ...
if not (b ||:= \CT[1(i := n % cm, n /:= cm) ]) then { CT[j := i] := "" # ...or start new cache entry while j > 0 do CT[i] ||:= "01"[ 1(1+j % 2, j /:= 2 )] b ||:= CT[i] := left(CT[i],cb,"0") # finish cache with padding } }
return reverse(trim(b,"0")) # nothing extraneous end</lang>
- Output:
5 = 101 50 = 110010 255 = 11111111 1285 = 10100000101 9000 = 10001100101000
Idris
<lang Idris>module Main
binaryDigit : Integer -> Char binaryDigit n = if (mod n 2) == 1 then '1' else '0'
binaryString : Integer -> String binaryString 0 = "0" binaryString n = pack (loop n [])
where loop : Integer -> List Char -> List Char loop 0 acc = acc loop n acc = loop (div n 2) (binaryDigit n :: acc)
main : IO () main = do
putStrLn (binaryString 0) putStrLn (binaryString 5) putStrLn (binaryString 50) putStrLn (binaryString 9000)
</lang>
- Output:
0 101 110010 10001100101000
J
<lang j> tobin=: -.&' '@":@#:
tobin 5
101
tobin 50
110010
tobin 9000
10001100101000</lang> Algorithm: Remove spaces from the character list which results from formatting the binary list which represents the numeric argument.
I am using implicit output.
Java
<lang java>public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(Integer.toBinaryString(5)); System.out.println(Integer.toBinaryString(50)); System.out.println(Integer.toBinaryString(9000)); }
}</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
JavaScript
ES5
<lang javascript>function toBinary(number) {
return new Number(number) .toString(2);
} var demoValues = [5, 50, 9000]; for (var i = 0; i < demoValues.length; ++i) {
// alert() in a browser, wscript.echo in WSH, etc. print(toBinary(demoValues[i]));
}</lang>
ES6
The simplest showBin (or showIntAtBase), using default digit characters, would use JavaScript's standard String.toString(base):
<lang JavaScript>(() => {
// showIntAtBase_ :: // Int -> Int -> String const showIntAtBase_ = (base, n) => (n) .toString(base);
// showBin :: Int -> String const showBin = n => showIntAtBase_(2, n);
// GENERIC FUNCTIONS FOR TEST ---------------------------------------------
// intercalate :: String -> [a] -> String const intercalate = (s, xs) => xs.join(s);
// map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b] const map = (f, xs) => xs.map(f);
// unlines :: [String] -> String const unlines = xs => xs.join('\n');
// show :: a -> String const show = x => JSON.stringify(x);
// TEST -------------------------------------------------------------------
return unlines(map( n => intercalate(' -> ', [show(n), showBin(n)]), [5, 50, 9000] ));
})();</lang>
- Output:
5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Or, if we need more flexibility with the set of digits used, we can write a version of showIntAtBase which takes a more specific Int -> Char function as as an argument. This one is a rough translation of Haskell's Numeric.showIntAtBase:
<lang JavaScript>(() => {
// showBin :: Int -> String const showBin = n => { const binaryChar = n => n !== 0 ? '一' : '〇';
return showIntAtBase(2, binaryChar, n, ); };
// showIntAtBase :: Int -> (Int -> Char) -> Int -> String -> String const showIntAtBase = (base, toChr, n, rs) => { const showIt = ([n, d], r) => { const r_ = toChr(d) + r; return n !== 0 ? ( showIt(quotRem(n, base), r_) ) : r_; }; return base <= 1 ? ( 'error: showIntAtBase applied to unsupported base' ) : n < 0 ? ( 'error: showIntAtBase applied to negative number' ) : showIt(quotRem(n, base), rs); };
// quotRem :: Integral a => a -> a -> (a, a) const quotRem = (m, n) => [Math.floor(m / n), m % n];
// GENERIC FUNCTIONS FOR TEST ---------------------------------------------
// intercalate :: String -> [a] -> String const intercalate = (s, xs) => xs.join(s);
// map :: (a -> b) -> [a] -> [b] const map = (f, xs) => xs.map(f);
// unlines :: [String] -> String const unlines = xs => xs.join('\n');
// show :: a -> String const show = x => JSON.stringify(x);
// TEST -------------------------------------------------------------------
return unlines(map( n => intercalate(' -> ', [show(n), showBin(n)]), [5, 50, 9000] ));
})();</lang>
- Output:
5 -> 一〇一 50 -> 一一〇〇一〇 9000 -> 一〇〇〇一一〇〇一〇一〇〇〇
Joy
<lang joy>HIDE _ == [null] [pop] [2 div swap] [48 + putch] linrec IN int2bin == [null] [48 + putch] [_] ifte '\n putch END</lang> Using int2bin: <lang joy>0 setautoput 0 int2bin 5 int2bin 50 int2bin 9000 int2bin.</lang>
jq
<lang jq>def binary_digits:
[ recurse( ./2 | floor; . > 0) % 2 ] | reverse | join("") ;
- The task:
(5, 50, 9000) | binary_digits</lang>
- Output:
$ jq -n -r -f Binary_digits.jq 101 110010 10001100101000
Julia
<lang julia>using Printf
for n in (0, 5, 50, 9000)
@printf("%6i → %s\n", n, string(n, base=2))
end
- with pad
println("\nwith pad") for n in (0, 5, 50, 9000)
@printf("%6i → %s\n", n, string(n, base=2, pad=20))
end</lang>
- Output:
0 → 0 5 → 101 50 → 110010 9000 → 10001100101000 with pad 0 → 00000000000000000000 5 → 00000000000000000101 50 → 00000000000000110010 9000 → 00000010001100101000
K
<lang k> tobin: ,/$2_vs
tobin' 5 50 9000
("101"
"110010" "10001100101000")</lang>
Kotlin
<lang scala>// version 1.0.5-2
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val numbers = intArrayOf(5, 50, 9000) for (number in numbers) println("%4d".format(number) + " -> " + Integer.toBinaryString(number))
}</lang>
- Output:
5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Lambdatalk
<lang scheme> {def dec2bin
{lambda {:dec} {if {= :dec 0} then 0 else {if {< :dec 2} then 1 else {dec2bin {floor {/ :dec 2}}}{% :dec 2} }}}}
-> dec2bin
{dec2bin 5} -> 101 {dec2bin 5} -> 110010 {dec2bin 9000} -> 10001100101000
{S.map dec2bin 5 50 9000} -> 101 110010 10001100101000
{S.map {lambda {:i} {br}:i -> {dec2bin :i}} 5 50 9000} -> 5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
</lang>
Lang5
<lang lang5>'%b '__number_format set [5 50 9000] [3 1] reshape .</lang>
- Output:
[ [ 101 ] [ 110010 ] [ 10001100101000 ] ]
LFE
If one is simple printing the results and doesn't need to use them (e.g., assign them to any variables, etc.), this is very concise: <lang lisp> (: io format '"~.2B~n~.2B~n~.2B~n" (list 5 50 9000)) </lang>
If, however, you do need to get the results from a function, you can use (: erlang integer_to_list ... )
. Here's a simple example that does the same thing as the previous code:
<lang lisp>
(: lists foreach
(lambda (x) (: io format '"~s~n" (list (: erlang integer_to_list x 2)))) (list 5 50 9000))
</lang>
- Output (for both examples):
101 110010 10001100101000
Liberty BASIC
<lang lb>for a = 0 to 16 print a;"=";dec2bin$(a) next a=50:print a;"=";dec2bin$(a) a=254:print a;"=";dec2bin$(a) a=9000:print a;"=";dec2bin$(a) wait
function dec2bin$(num)
if num=0 then dec2bin$="0":exit function while num>0 dec2bin$=str$(num mod 2)+dec2bin$ num=int(num/2) wend
end function </lang>
Little Man Computer
Runs in a home-made simulator, which is compatible with Peter Higginson's online simulator except that it has more room for output. Makes use of PH's non-standard OTC instruction to output ASCII characters.
The maximum integer in LMC is 999, so 90000 in the task is here replaced by 900. <lang Little Man Computer> // Little Man Computer, for Rosetta Code. // Read numbers from user and display them in binary. // Exit when input = 0. input INP
BRZ zero STA N
// Write number followed by '->'
OUT LDA asc_hy OTC LDA asc_gt OTC
// Find greatest power of 2 not exceeding N, // and count how many digits will be output
LDA c1 STA pwr2
loop STA nrDigits
LDA N SUB pwr2 SUB pwr2 BRP double BRA part2 // jump out if next power of 2 would exceed N
double LDA pwr2
ADD pwr2 STA pwr2 LDA nrDigits ADD c1 BRA loop
// Write the binary digits part2 LDA N
SUB pwr2
set_diff STA diff
LDA asc_1 // first digit is always 1
wr_digit OTC // write digit
LDA nrDigits // count down the number of digits SUB c1 BRZ input // if all digits done, loop for next number STA nrDigits
// We now want to compare diff with pwr2/2. // Since division is awkward in LMC, we compare 2*diff with pwr2.
LDA diff // diff := diff * 2 ADD diff STA diff SUB pwr2 // is diff >= pwr2 ? BRP set_diff // yes, update diff and write '1' LDA asc_0 // no, write '0' BRA wr_digit
zero HLT // stop if input = 0 // Constants c1 DAT 1 asc_hy DAT 45 asc_gt DAT 62 asc_0 DAT 48 asc_1 DAT 49 // Variables N DAT pwr2 DAT nrDigits DAT diff DAT </lang>
- Output:
5->101 50->110010 900->1110000100
LLVM
<lang llvm>; ModuleID = 'binary.c'
- source_filename = "binary.c"
- target datalayout = "e-m
- w-i64:64-f80:128-n8:16:32:64-S128"
- target triple = "x86_64-pc-windows-msvc19.21.27702"
- This is not strictly LLVM, as it uses the C library function "printf".
- LLVM does not provide a way to print values, so the alternative would be
- to just load the string into memory, and that would be boring.
- Additional comments have been inserted, as well as changes made from the output produced by clang such as putting more meaningful labels for the jumps
$"\01??_C@_03OFAPEBGM@?$CFs?6?$AA@" = comdat any
- --- String constant defintions
@"\01??_C@_03OFAPEBGM@?$CFs?6?$AA@" = linkonce_odr unnamed_addr constant [4 x i8] c"%s\0A\00", comdat, align 1
- --- The declaration for the external C printf function.
declare i32 @printf(i8*, ...)
- --- The declaration for the external C log10 function.
declare double @log10(double) #1
- --- The declaration for the external C malloc function.
declare noalias i8* @malloc(i64) #2
- --- The declaration for the external C free function.
declare void @free(i8*) #2
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- -- Function that allocates a string with a binary representation of a number
define i8* @bin(i32) #0 {
- -- uint32_t x (local copy)
%2 = alloca i32, align 4
- -- size_t bits
%3 = alloca i64, align 8
- -- intermediate value
%4 = alloca i8*, align 8
- -- size_t i
%5 = alloca i64, align 8 store i32 %0, i32* %2, align 4
- -- x == 0, start determinig what value to initially store in bits
%6 = load i32, i32* %2, align 4 %7 = icmp eq i32 %6, 0 br i1 %7, label %just_one, label %calculate_logs
just_one:
br label %assign_bits
calculate_logs:
- -- log10((double) x)/log10(2) + 1
%8 = load i32, i32* %2, align 4 %9 = uitofp i32 %8 to double
- -- log10((double) x)
%10 = call double @log10(double %9) #3
- -- log10(2)
%11 = call double @log10(double 2.000000e+00) #3
- -- remainder of calculation
%12 = fdiv double %10, %11 %13 = fadd double %12, 1.000000e+00 br label %assign_bits
assign_bits:
- -- bits = (x == 0) ? 1
- log10((double) x)/log10(2) + 1;
- -- phi basically selects what the value to assign should be based on which basic block came before
%14 = phi double [ 1.000000e+00, %just_one ], [ %13, %calculate_logs ] %15 = fptoui double %14 to i64 store i64 %15, i64* %3, align 8
- -- char *ret = malloc((bits + 1) * sizeof (char));
%16 = load i64, i64* %3, align 8 %17 = add i64 %16, 1 %18 = mul i64 %17, 1 %19 = call noalias i8* @malloc(i64 %18) store i8* %19, i8** %4, align 8 store i64 0, i64* %5, align 8 br label %loop
loop:
- -- i < bits;
%20 = load i64, i64* %5, align 8 %21 = load i64, i64* %3, align 8 %22 = icmp ult i64 %20, %21 br i1 %22, label %loop_body, label %exit
loop_body:
- -- ret[bits - i - 1] = (x & 1) ? '1'
- '0';
%23 = load i32, i32* %2, align 4 %24 = and i32 %23, 1 %25 = icmp ne i32 %24, 0 %26 = zext i1 %25 to i64 %27 = select i1 %25, i32 49, i32 48 %28 = trunc i32 %27 to i8 %29 = load i8*, i8** %4, align 8 %30 = load i64, i64* %3, align 8 %31 = load i64, i64* %5, align 8 %32 = sub i64 %30, %31 %33 = sub i64 %32, 1 %34 = getelementptr inbounds i8, i8* %29, i64 %33 store i8 %28, i8* %34, align 1
- -- x >>= 1;
%35 = load i32, i32* %2, align 4 %36 = lshr i32 %35, 1 store i32 %36, i32* %2, align 4 br label %loop_increment
loop_increment:
- -- i++;
%37 = load i64, i64* %5, align 8 %38 = add i64 %37, 1 store i64 %38, i64* %5, align 8 br label %loop
exit:
- -- ret[bits] = '\0';
%39 = load i8*, i8** %4, align 8 %40 = load i64, i64* %3, align 8 %41 = getelementptr inbounds i8, i8* %39, i64 %40 store i8 0, i8* %41, align 1
- -- return ret;
%42 = load i8*, i8** %4, align 8 ret i8* %42
}
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- -- Entry point into the program
define i32 @main() #0 {
- -- 32-bit zero for the return
%1 = alloca i32, align 4
- -- size_t i, for tracking the loop index
%2 = alloca i64, align 8
- -- char* for the result of the bin call
%3 = alloca i8*, align 8
- -- initialize
store i32 0, i32* %1, align 4 store i64 0, i64* %2, align 8 br label %loop
loop:
- -- while (i < 20)
%4 = load i64, i64* %2, align 8 %5 = icmp ult i64 %4, 20 br i1 %5, label %loop_body, label %exit
loop_body:
- -- char *binstr = bin(i);
%6 = load i64, i64* %2, align 8 %7 = trunc i64 %6 to i32 %8 = call i8* @bin(i32 %7) store i8* %8, i8** %3, align 8
- -- printf("%s\n", binstr);
%9 = load i8*, i8** %3, align 8 %10 = call i32 (i8*, ...) @printf(i8* getelementptr inbounds ([4 x i8], [4 x i8]* @"\01??_C@_03OFAPEBGM@?$CFs?6?$AA@", i32 0, i32 0), i8* %9)
- -- free(binstr);
%11 = load i8*, i8** %3, align 8 call void @free(i8* %11) br label %loop_increment
loop_increment:
- -- i++
%12 = load i64, i64* %2, align 8 %13 = add i64 %12, 1 store i64 %13, i64* %2, align 8 br label %loop
exit:
- -- return 0 (implicit)
%14 = load i32, i32* %1, align 4 ret i32 %14
}
attributes #0 = { noinline nounwind optnone uwtable "correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt-fp-math"="false" "disable-tail-calls"="false" "less-precise-fpmad"="false" "no-frame-pointer-elim"="false" "no-infs-fp-math"="false" "no-jump-tables"="false" "no-nans-fp-math"="false" "no-signed-zeros-fp-math"="false" "no-trapping-math"="false" "stack-protector-buffer-size"="8" "target-cpu"="x86-64" "target-features"="+fxsr,+mmx,+sse,+sse2,+x87" "unsafe-fp-math"="false" "use-soft-float"="false" } attributes #1 = { nounwind "correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt-fp-math"="false" "disable-tail-calls"="false" "less-precise-fpmad"="false" "no-frame-pointer-elim"="false" "no-infs-fp-math"="false" "no-nans-fp-math"="false" "no-signed-zeros-fp-math"="false" "no-trapping-math"="false" "stack-protector-buffer-size"="8" "target-cpu"="x86-64" "target-features"="+fxsr,+mmx,+sse,+sse2,+x87" "unsafe-fp-math"="false" "use-soft-float"="false" } attributes #2 = { "correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt-fp-math"="false" "disable-tail-calls"="false" "less-precise-fpmad"="false" "no-frame-pointer-elim"="false" "no-infs-fp-math"="false" "no-nans-fp-math"="false" "no-signed-zeros-fp-math"="false" "no-trapping-math"="false" "stack-protector-buffer-size"="8" "target-cpu"="x86-64" "target-features"="+fxsr,+mmx,+sse,+sse2,+x87" "unsafe-fp-math"="false" "use-soft-float"="false" } attributes #3 = { nounwind }
!llvm.module.flags = !{!0, !1} !llvm.ident = !{!2}
!0 = !{i32 1, !"wchar_size", i32 2} !1 = !{i32 7, !"PIC Level", i32 2} !2 = !{!"clang version 6.0.1 (tags/RELEASE_601/final)"}</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 10000 10001 10010 10011
Locomotive Basic
<lang locobasic>10 PRINT BIN$(5) 20 PRINT BIN$(50) 30 PRINT BIN$(9000)</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
LOLCODE
<lang LOLCODE>HAI 1.3 HOW IZ I DECIMULBINUR YR DECIMUL
I HAS A BINUR ITZ "" IM IN YR DUUH BOTH SAEM DECIMUL AN SMALLR OF DECIMUL AN 0, O RLY? YA RLY, GTFO OIC BINUR R SMOOSH MOD OF DECIMUL AN 2 BINUR MKAY DECIMUL R MAEK QUOSHUNT OF DECIMUL AN 2 A NUMBR IM OUTTA YR DUUH FOUND YR BINUR
IF U SAY SO VISIBLE I IZ DECIMULBINUR YR 5 MKAY VISIBLE I IZ DECIMULBINUR YR 50 MKAY VISIBLE I IZ DECIMULBINUR YR 9000 MKAY KTHXBYE</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Lua
Lua - Iterative
<lang Lua>function dec2bin (n)
local bin = "" while n > 0 do bin = n % 2 .. bin n = math.floor(n / 2) end return bin
end
print(dec2bin(5)) print(dec2bin(50)) print(dec2bin(9000))</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Lua - Recursive
<lang lua>function dec2bin(n, bin)
bin = (n&1) .. (bin or "") -- use n%2 instead of n&1 for Lua 5.1/5.2 return n>1 and dec2bin(n//2, bin) or bin -- use math.floor(n/2) instead of n//2 for Lua 5.1/5.2
end
print(dec2bin(5)) print(dec2bin(50)) print(dec2bin(9000))</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
M2000 Interpreter
<lang M2000 Interpreter> Module Checkit {
Form 90, 40 Function BinFunc${ Dim Base 0, One$(16) One$( 0 ) = "0000", "0001", "0010", "0011", "0100", "0101", "0110", "0111", "1000", "1001", "1010", "1011", "1100", "1101", "1110", "1111" =lambda$ One$() (x, oct as long=4, bypass as boolean=True) ->{ if oct>0 and oct<5 then { oct=2*(int(4-oct) mod 4+1)-1 } Else oct=1 hx$ = Hex$(x, 4 ) Def Ret$ If Bypass then { For i= oct to len(hx$) if bypass Then if Mid$(hx$, i, 1 )="0" Else bypass=false If bypass and i<>Len(hx$) Then Continue Ret$ += One$( EVal( "0x" + Mid$(hx$, i, 1 ) ) ) Next i oct=instr(Ret$, "1") if oct=0 then { Ret$="0" } Else Ret$=mid$(Ret$, oct) } Else { For i= oct to len(hx$) Ret$ += One$( EVal( "0x" + Mid$(hx$, i, 1 ) ) ) Next i } =Ret$ } } Bin$=BinFunc$() Stack New { Data 9, 50, 9000 While not empty { Read x Print Format$("The decimal value {0::-10} should produce an output of {1:-32}",x, Bin$(x) ) } } Stack New { Data 9, 50, 9000 While not empty { Read x Print Format$("The decimal value {0::-10} should produce an output of {1:-32}",x, Bin$(x,,false) ) } } Stack New { Data 9, 50, 9000 While not empty { Read x Print Bin$(x) } }
} Checkit </lang>
- Output:
The decimal value 9 should produce an output of 1001 The decimal value 50 should produce an output of 110010 The decimal value 9000 should produce an output of 10001100101000 The decimal value 9 should produce an output of 00000000000000000000000000001001 The decimal value 50 should produce an output of 00000000000000000000000000110010 The decimal value 9000 should produce an output of 00000000000000000010001100101000 1001 110010 10001100101000
MAD
MAD has basically no support for runtime generation of strings.
Therefore, this program works by calculating an integer whose decimal representation
matches the binary representation of the input, e.g. BINARY.(5)
is 101
.
<lang MAD> NORMAL MODE IS INTEGER
INTERNAL FUNCTION(NUM) ENTRY TO BINARY. BTEMP = NUM BRSLT = 0 BDIGIT = 1
BIT WHENEVER BTEMP.NE.0
BRSLT = BRSLT + BDIGIT * (BTEMP-BTEMP/2*2) BTEMP = BTEMP/2 BDIGIT = BDIGIT * 10 TRANSFER TO BIT END OF CONDITIONAL FUNCTION RETURN BRSLT END OF FUNCTION THROUGH SHOW, FOR VALUES OF N = 5, 50, 9000
SHOW PRINT FORMAT FMT, N, BINARY.(N)
VECTOR VALUES FMT = $I4,2H: ,I16*$ END OF PROGRAM </lang>
- Output:
5: 101 50: 110010 9000: 10001100101000
Maple
<lang Maple> > convert( 50, 'binary' ); 110010 > convert( 9000, 'binary' ); 10001100101000 </lang>
Mathematica / Wolfram Language
<lang Mathematica>StringJoin @@ ToString /@ IntegerDigits[50, 2] </lang>
MATLAB / Octave
<lang Matlab> dec2bin(5)
dec2bin(50) dec2bin(9000) </lang>
The output is a string containing ascii(48) (i.e. '0') and ascii(49) (i.e. '1').
Maxima
<lang maxima>digits([arg]) := block(
[n: first(arg), b: if length(arg) > 1 then second(arg) else 10, v: [ ], q], do ( [n, q]: divide(n, b), v: cons(q, v), if n=0 then return(v)))$
binary(n) := simplode(digits(n, 2))$ binary(9000); /*
10001100101000
- /</lang>
MAXScript
<lang maxscript> -- MAXScript: Output decimal numbers from 0 to 16 as Binary : N.H. 2019 for k = 0 to 16 do ( temp = "" binString = "" b = k -- While loop wont execute for zero so force string to zero if b == 0 then temp = "0" while b > 0 do ( rem = b b = b / 2 If ((mod rem 2) as Integer) == 0 then temp = temp + "0" else temp = temp + "1"
)
-- Reverse the binary string for r = temp.count to 1 by -1 do ( binString = binString + temp[r] ) print binString ) </lang>
- Output:
Output to MAXScript Listener:
"0" "1" "10" "11" "100" "101" "110" "111" "1000" "1001" "1010" "1011" "1100" "1101" "1110" "1111" "10000"
Mercury
<lang mercury>:- module binary_digits.
- - interface.
- - import_module io.
- - pred main(io::di, io::uo) is det.
- - implementation.
- - import_module int, list, string.
main(!IO) :-
list.foldl(print_binary_digits, [5, 50, 9000], !IO).
- - pred print_binary_digits(int::in, io::di, io::uo) is det.
print_binary_digits(N, !IO) :-
io.write_string(int_to_base_string(N, 2), !IO), io.nl(!IO).</lang>
min
<lang min>(2 over over mod 'div dip) :divmod2
(
:n () =list (n 0 >) (n divmod2 list append #list @n) while list reverse 'string map "" join "^0+" "" replace ;remove leading zeroes
) :bin
(5 50 9000) (bin puts) foreach</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
MiniScript
Iterative
<lang MiniScript>binary = function(n)
result = "" while n result = str(n%2) + result n = floor(n/2) end while if not result then return "0" return result
end function
print binary(5) print binary(50) print binary(9000) print binary(0)</lang>
Recursive
<lang MiniScript>binary = function(n,result="")
if n == 0 then if result == "" then return "0" else return result end if result = str(n%2) + result return binary(floor(n/2),result)
end function
print binary(5) print binary(50) print binary(9000) print binary(0)</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000 0
mLite
<lang sml>fun binary (0, b) = implode ` map (fn x = if int x then chr (x + 48) else x) b | (n, b) = binary (n div 2, n mod 2 :: b) | n = binary (n, [])
</lang>
from the REPL
mLite > binary 5; "101" > binary 50; "110010" > binary 9000; "10001100101000"
Modula-2
<lang modula2>MODULE Binary; FROM FormatString IMPORT FormatString; FROM Terminal IMPORT Write,WriteLn,ReadChar;
PROCEDURE PrintByte(b : INTEGER); VAR v : INTEGER; BEGIN
v := 080H; WHILE v#0 DO IF (b BAND v) # 0 THEN Write('1') ELSE Write('0') END; v := v SHR 1 END
END PrintByte;
VAR
buf : ARRAY[0..15] OF CHAR; i : INTEGER;
BEGIN
FOR i:=0 TO 15 DO PrintByte(i); WriteLn END;
ReadChar
END Binary.</lang>
Modula-3
<lang modula3>MODULE Binary EXPORTS Main;
IMPORT IO, Fmt;
VAR num := 10;
BEGIN
IO.Put(Fmt.Int(num, 2) & "\n"); num := 150; IO.Put(Fmt.Int(num, 2) & "\n");
END Binary.</lang>
- Output:
1010 10010110
NetRexx
<lang NetRexx>/* NetRexx */ options replace format comments java crossref symbols nobinary
runSample(arg) return
method getBinaryDigits(nr) public static
bd = nr.d2x.x2b.strip('L', 0) if bd.length = 0 then bd = 0 return bd
method runSample(arg) public static
parse arg list if list = then list = '0 5 50 9000' loop n_ = 1 to list.words w_ = list.word(n_) say w_.right(20)':' getBinaryDigits(w_) end n_</lang>
- Output:
0: 0 5: 101 50: 110010 9000: 10001100101000
NewLisp
<lang NewLisp>
- Using the built-in "bits" function
- For integers up to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807
(map println (map bits '(0 5 50 9000)))
- n > 0, "unlimited" size
(define (big-bits n) (let (res "") (while (> n 0) (push (if (even? n) "0" "1") res) (setq n (/ n 2))) res))
- Example
(println (big-bits 1234567890123456789012345678901234567890L)) </lang>
Output: 0 101 110010 10001100101000 1110100000110010010010000001110101110000001101101111110011101110001010110010111100010111111001011011001110001111110000101011010010
Nickle
Using the Nickle output radix operator:
prompt$ nickle > 0 # 2 0 > 5 # 2 101 > 50 # 2 110010 > 9000 # 2 10001100101000
Nim
<lang nim>proc binDigits(x: BiggestInt, r: int): int =
## Calculates how many digits `x` has when each digit covers `r` bits. result = 1 var y = x shr r while y > 0: y = y shr r inc(result)
proc toBin*(x: BiggestInt, len: Natural = 0): string =
## converts `x` into its binary representation. The resulting string is ## always `len` characters long. By default the length is determined ## automatically. No leading ``0b`` prefix is generated. var mask: BiggestInt = 1 shift: BiggestInt = 0 len = if len == 0: binDigits(x, 1) else: len result = newString(len) for j in countdown(len-1, 0): result[j] = chr(int((x and mask) shr shift) + ord('0')) shift = shift + 1 mask = mask shl 1
for i in 0..15:
echo toBin(i)</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
Version using strformat
<lang Nim>import strformat
for n in 0..15:
echo fmt"{n:b}"</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
Oberon-2
<lang oberon2> MODULE BinaryDigits; IMPORT Out;
PROCEDURE OutBin(x: INTEGER); BEGIN IF x > 1 THEN OutBin(x DIV 2) END; Out.Int(x MOD 2, 1); END OutBin;
BEGIN
OutBin(0); Out.Ln; OutBin(1); Out.Ln; OutBin(2); Out.Ln; OutBin(3); Out.Ln; OutBin(42); Out.Ln;
END BinaryDigits. </lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 101010
Objeck
<lang objeck>class Binary {
function : Main(args : String[]) ~ Nil { 5->ToBinaryString()->PrintLine(); 50->ToBinaryString()->PrintLine(); 9000->ToBinaryString()->PrintLine(); }
}</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
OCaml
<lang ocaml>let bin_of_int d =
if d < 0 then invalid_arg "bin_of_int" else if d = 0 then "0" else let rec aux acc d = if d = 0 then acc else aux (string_of_int (d land 1) :: acc) (d lsr 1) in String.concat "" (aux [] d)
let () =
let d = read_int () in Printf.printf "%8s\n" (bin_of_int d)</lang>
Oforth
- Output:
>5 asStringOfBase(2) println 101 ok >50 asStringOfBase(2) println 110010 ok >9000 asStringOfBase(2) println 10001100101000 ok >423785674235000123456789 asStringOfBase(2) println 1011001101111010111011110101001101111000000000000110001100000100111110100010101 ok
Ol
<lang scheme> (print (number->string 5 2)) (print (number->string 50 2)) (print (number->string 9000 2)) </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
OxygenBasic
The Assembly code uses block structures to minimise the use of labels. <lang oxygenbasic>
function BinaryBits(sys n) as string
string buf=nuls 32 sys p=strptr buf sys le mov eax,n mov edi,p mov ecx,32 ' 'STRIP LEADING ZEROS ( dec ecx jl fwd done shl eax,1 jnc repeat ) 'PLACE DIGITS ' mov byte [edi],49 '1' inc edi ( cmp ecx,0 jle exit mov dl,48 '0' shl eax,1 ( jnc exit mov dl,49 '1' ) mov [edi],dl inc edi dec ecx repeat ) done: ' sub edi,p mov le,edi if le then return left buf,le return "0"
end function
print BinaryBits 0xaa 'result 10101010 </lang>
Panda
<lang panda>0..15.radix:2 nl</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111
PARI/GP
<lang parigp>bin(n:int)=concat(apply(s->Str(s),binary(n)))</lang>
Pascal
FPC compiler Version 2.6 upwards.The obvious version. <lang pascal>program IntToBinTest; {$MODE objFPC} uses
strutils;//IntToBin
function WholeIntToBin(n: NativeUInt):string; var
digits: NativeInt;
begin // BSR?Word -> index of highest set bit but 0 -> 255 ==-1 )
IF n <> 0 then Begin
{$ifdef CPU64}
digits:= BSRQWord(NativeInt(n))+1;
{$ELSE}
digits:= BSRDWord(NativeInt(n))+1;
{$ENDIF}
WholeIntToBin := IntToBin(NativeInt(n),digits); end else WholeIntToBin:='0';
end; procedure IntBinTest(n: NativeUint); Begin
writeln(n:12,' ',WholeIntToBin(n));
end; BEGIN
IntBinTest(5);IntBinTest(50);IntBinTest(5000); IntBinTest(0);IntBinTest(NativeUint(-1));
end.</lang>
- Output:
5 101 50 110010 5000 1001110001000 0 0 18446744073709551615 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
alternative 4 chars at a time
using pchar like C insert one nibble at a time. Beware of the endianess of the constant. I check performance with random Data. <lang pascal> program IntToPcharTest; uses
sysutils;//for timing
const {$ifdef CPU64}
cBitcnt = 64;
{$ELSE}
cBitcnt = 32;
{$ENDIF}
procedure IntToBinPchar(AInt : NativeUInt;s:pChar); //create the Bin-String //!Beware of endianess ! this is for little endian const
IO : array[0..1] of char = ('0','1');//('_','X'); as you like IO4 : array[0..15] of LongWord = // '0000','1000' as LongWord
($30303030,$31303030,$30313030,$31313030,
$30303130,$31303130,$30313130,$31313130, $30303031,$31303031,$30313031,$31313031, $30303131,$31303131,$30313131,$31313131);
var
i : NativeInt;
begin
IF AInt > 0 then Begin // Get the index of highest set bit
{$ifdef CPU64}
i := BSRQWord(NativeInt(Aint))+1;
{$ELSE}
i := BSRDWord(NativeInt(Aint))+1;
{$ENDIF}
s[i] := #0; //get 4 characters at once dec(i); while i >= 3 do Begin pLongInt(@s[i-3])^ := IO4[Aint AND 15]; Aint := Aint SHR 4; dec(i,4) end; //the rest one by one while i >= 0 do Begin s[i] := IO[Aint AND 1]; AInt := Aint shr 1; dec(i); end; end else Begin s[0] := IO[0]; s[1] := #0; end;
end;
procedure Binary_Digits; var
s: pCHar;
begin
GetMem(s,cBitcnt+4); fillchar(s[0],cBitcnt+4,#0); IntToBinPchar( 5,s);writeln(' 5: ',s); IntToBinPchar( 50,s);writeln(' 50: ',s); IntToBinPchar(9000,s);writeln('9000: ',s); IntToBinPchar(NativeUInt(-1),s);writeln(' -1: ',s); FreeMem(s);
end;
const
rounds = 10*1000*1000;
var
s: pChar; t :TDateTime; i,l,cnt: NativeInt; Testfield : array[0..rounds-1] of NativeUint;
Begin
randomize; cnt := 0; For i := rounds downto 1 do Begin l := random(High(NativeInt)); Testfield[i] := l; {$ifdef CPU64} inc(cnt,BSRQWord(l)); {$ELSE} inc(cnt,BSRQWord(l)); {$ENDIF} end; Binary_Digits; GetMem(s,cBitcnt+4); fillchar(s[0],cBitcnt+4,#0); //warm up For i := 0 to rounds-1 do IntToBinPchar(Testfield[i],s); //speed test t := time; For i := 1 to rounds do IntToBinPchar(Testfield[i],s); t := time-t; Write(' Time ',t*86400.0:6:3,' secs, average stringlength '); Writeln(cnt/rounds+1:6:3); FreeMem(s);
end.</lang>
- Output:
//32-Bit fpc 3.1.1 -O3 -XX -Xs Cpu i4330 @3.5 Ghz 5: 101 50: 110010 9000: 10001100101000 -1: 11111111111111111111111111111111 Time 0.133 secs, average stringlength 30.000 //64-Bit fpc 3.1.1 -O3 -XX -Xs ... -1: 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Time 0.175 secs, average stringlength 62.000 ..the obvious version takes about 1.1 secs generating the string takes most of the time..
Peloton
<lang sgml><@ defbaslit>2</@>
<@ saybaslit>0</@> <@ saybaslit>5</@> <@ saybaslit>50</@> <@ saybaslit>9000</@> </lang>
Perl
<lang perl>for (5, 50, 9000) {
printf "%b\n", $_;
}</lang>
101 110010 10001100101000
Phix
printf(1,"%b\n",5) printf(1,"%b\n",50) printf(1,"%b\n",9000)
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Phixmonti
<lang Phixmonti>def printBinary
"The decimal value " print dup print " should produce an output of " print 20 int>bit len 1 -1 3 tolist for get not if -1 del else exitfor endif endfor len 1 -1 3 tolist for get print endfor nl
enddef
5 printBinary 50 printBinary 9000 printBinary</lang>
PHP
<lang php><?php echo decbin(5); echo decbin(50); echo decbin(9000);</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
PicoLisp
<lang PicoLisp>: (bin 5) -> "101"
- (bin 50)
-> "110010"
- (bin 9000)
-> "10001100101000"</lang>
Piet
Rendered as wikitable, because image upload is not possible:
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww | ww |
Examples:
? 5 101 ? 50 110010 ? 9000 10001100101000
Explanation of program flow and image download link on my user page: [1]
PL/I
Displays binary output trivially, but with leading zeros: <lang pli>put edit (25) (B);</lang>
- Output:
Output: 0011001
With leading zero suppression: <lang pli> declare text character (50) initial (' ');
put string(text) edit (25) (b); put skip list (trim(text, '0'));
put string(text) edit (2147483647) (b); put skip list (trim(text, '0'));</lang>
- Output:
11001 1111111111111111111111111111111
PL/M
<lang plm>100H:
/* CP/M BDOS CALL */ BDOS: PROCEDURE (FN, ARG);
DECLARE FN BYTE, ARG ADDRESS; GO TO 5;
END BDOS;
/* PRINT STRING */ PRINT: PROCEDURE (STRING);
DECLARE STRING ADDRESS; CALL BDOS(9, STRING);
END PRINT;
/* PRINT BINARY NUMBER */ PRINT$BINARY: PROCEDURE (N);
DECLARE S (19) BYTE INITIAL ('................',13,10,'$'); DECLARE (N, P) ADDRESS, C BASED P BYTE; P = .S(16);
BIT:
P = P - 1; C = (N AND 1) + '0'; IF (N := SHR(N,1)) <> 0 THEN GO TO BIT; CALL PRINT(P);
END PRINT$BINARY;
/* EXAMPLES FROM TASK */ DECLARE TEST (3) ADDRESS INITIAL (5, 50, 9000); DECLARE I BYTE;
DO I = 0 TO LAST(TEST);
CALL PRINT$BINARY(TEST(I));
END;
CALL BDOS(0,0); EOF</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
PowerBASIC
Pretty simple task in PowerBASIC since it has a built-in BIN$-Function. Omitting the second parameter ("Digits") means no leading zeros in the result. <lang powerbasic>
- COMPILE EXE
- DIM ALL
- COMPILER PBCC 6
FUNCTION PBMAIN () AS LONG LOCAL i, d() AS DWORD REDIM d(2) ARRAY ASSIGN d() = 5, 50, 9000
FOR i = 0 TO 2 PRINT STR$(d(i)) & ": " & BIN$(d(i)) & " (" & BIN$(d(i), 32) & ")" NEXT i
END FUNCTION</lang>
- Output:
5: 101 (00000000000000000000000000000101) 50: 110010 (00000000000000000000000000110010) 9000: 10001100101000 (00000000000000000010001100101000)
PowerShell
<lang PowerShell>@(5,50,900) | foreach-object { [Convert]::ToString($_,2) }</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 1110000100
Processing
<lang processing>println(Integer.toBinaryString(5)); // 101 println(Integer.toBinaryString(50)); // 110010 println(Integer.toBinaryString(9000)); // 10001100101000</lang> Processing also has a binary() function, but this returns zero-padded results <lang processing>println(binary(5)); // 00000000000101 println(binary(50)); // 00000000110010 println(binary(9000)); // 10001100101000</lang>
Prolog
<lang prolog> binary(X) :- format('~2r~n', [X]). main :- maplist(binary, [5,50,9000]), halt. </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
PureBasic
<lang PureBasic>If OpenConsole()
PrintN(Bin(5)) ;101 PrintN(Bin(50)) ;110010 PrintN(Bin(9000)) ;10001100101000 Print(#CRLF$ + #CRLF$ + "Press ENTER to exit"): Input() CloseConsole()
EndIf</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Python
String.format() method
<lang python>>>> for i in range(16): print('{0:b}'.format(i))
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111</lang>
Built-in bin() function
<lang python>>>> for i in range(16): print(bin(i)[2:])
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111</lang> Pre-Python 2.6: <lang python>>>> oct2bin = {'0': '000', '1': '001', '2': '010', '3': '011', '4': '100', '5': '101', '6': '110', '7': '111'} >>> bin = lambda n: .join(oct2bin[octdigit] for octdigit in '%o' % n).lstrip('0') or '0' >>> for i in range(16): print(bin(i))
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111</lang>
Custom functions
Defined in terms of a more general showIntAtBase function: <lang python>Binary strings for integers
- showBinary :: Int -> String
def showBinary(n):
Binary string representation of an integer. def binaryChar(n): return '1' if n != 0 else '0' return showIntAtBase(2)(binaryChar)(n)()
- TEST ----------------------------------------------------
- main :: IO()
def main():
Test
print('Mapping showBinary over integer list:') print(unlines(map( showBinary, [5, 50, 9000] )))
print(tabulated( '\nUsing showBinary as a display function:' )(str)(showBinary)( lambda x: x )([5, 50, 9000]))
- GENERIC -------------------------------------------------
- compose (<<<) :: (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
def compose(g):
Right to left function composition. return lambda f: lambda x: g(f(x))
- enumFromTo :: (Int, Int) -> [Int]
def enumFromTo(m):
Integer enumeration from m to n. return lambda n: list(range(m, 1 + n))
- showIntAtBase :: Int -> (Int -> String) -> Int -> String -> String
def showIntAtBase(base):
String representing a non-negative integer using the base specified by the first argument, and the character representation specified by the second. The final argument is a (possibly empty) string to which the numeric string will be prepended. def wrap(toChr, n, rs): def go(nd, r): n, d = nd r_ = toChr(d) + r return go(divmod(n, base), r_) if 0 != n else r_ return 'unsupported base' if 1 >= base else ( 'negative number' if 0 > n else ( go(divmod(n, base), rs)) ) return lambda toChr: lambda n: lambda rs: ( wrap(toChr, n, rs) )
- tabulated :: String -> (a -> String) ->
- (b -> String) ->
- (a -> b) -> [a] -> String
def tabulated(s):
Heading -> x display function -> fx display function -> f -> value list -> tabular string. def go(xShow, fxShow, f, xs): w = max(map(compose(len)(xShow), xs)) return s + '\n' + '\n'.join( xShow(x).rjust(w, ' ') + ' -> ' + fxShow(f(x)) for x in xs ) return lambda xShow: lambda fxShow: lambda f: lambda xs: go( xShow, fxShow, f, xs )
- unlines :: [String] -> String
def unlines(xs):
A single string derived by the intercalation of a list of strings with the newline character. return '\n'.join(xs)
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()</lang>
- Output:
Mapping showBinary over integer list: 101 110010 10001100101000 Using showBinary as a display function: 5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Or, using a more specialised function to decompose an integer to a list of boolean values:
<lang python>Decomposition of an integer to a string of booleans.
- boolsFromInt :: Int -> [Bool]
def boolsFromInt(n):
List of booleans derived by binary decomposition of an integer. def go(x): (q, r) = divmod(x, 2) return Just((q, bool(r))) if x else Nothing() return unfoldl(go)(n)
- stringFromBools :: [Bool] -> String
def stringFromBools(xs):
Binary string representation of a list of boolean values. def oneOrZero(x): return '1' if x else '0' return .join(map(oneOrZero, xs))
- TEST ----------------------------------------------------
- main :: IO()
def main():
Test
binary = compose(stringFromBools)(boolsFromInt)
print('Mapping a composed function:') print(unlines(map( binary, [5, 50, 9000] )))
print( tabulated( '\n\nTabulating a string display from binary data:' )(str)(stringFromBools)( boolsFromInt )([5, 50, 9000]) )
- GENERIC -------------------------------------------------
- Just :: a -> Maybe a
def Just(x):
Constructor for an inhabited Maybe (option type) value. return {'type': 'Maybe', 'Nothing': False, 'Just': x}
- Nothing :: Maybe a
def Nothing():
Constructor for an empty Maybe (option type) value. return {'type': 'Maybe', 'Nothing': True}
- compose (<<<) :: (b -> c) -> (a -> b) -> a -> c
def compose(g):
Right to left function composition. return lambda f: lambda x: g(f(x))
- enumFromTo :: (Int, Int) -> [Int]
def enumFromTo(m):
Integer enumeration from m to n. return lambda n: list(range(m, 1 + n))
- tabulated :: String -> (a -> String) ->
- (b -> String) ->
- (a -> b) -> [a] -> String
def tabulated(s):
Heading -> x display function -> fx display function -> f -> value list -> tabular string. def go(xShow, fxShow, f, xs): w = max(map(compose(len)(xShow), xs)) return s + '\n' + '\n'.join( xShow(x).rjust(w, ' ') + ' -> ' + fxShow(f(x)) for x in xs ) return lambda xShow: lambda fxShow: lambda f: lambda xs: go( xShow, fxShow, f, xs )
- unfoldl(lambda x: Just(((x - 1), x)) if 0 != x else Nothing())(10)
- -> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
- unfoldl :: (b -> Maybe (b, a)) -> b -> [a]
def unfoldl(f):
Dual to reduce or foldl. Where these reduce a list to a summary value, unfoldl builds a list from a seed value. Where f returns Just(a, b), a is appended to the list, and the residual b is used as the argument for the next application of f. When f returns Nothing, the completed list is returned. def go(v): xr = v, v xs = [] while True: mb = f(xr[0]) if mb.get('Nothing'): return xs else: xr = mb.get('Just') xs.insert(0, xr[1]) return xs return lambda x: go(x)
- unlines :: [String] -> String
def unlines(xs):
A single string derived by the intercalation of a list of strings with the newline character. return '\n'.join(xs)
- MAIN -------------------------------------------------
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()</lang>
- Output:
Mapping a composed function: 101 110010 10001100101000 Tabulating a string display from binary data: 5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
Quackery
Quackery provides built-in radix control, much like Forth. <lang quackery>
2 base put ( Numbers will be output in base 2 now. ) ( Bases from 2 to 36 (inclusive) are supported. )
5 echo cr 50 echo cr 9000 echo cr
base release ( It's best to clean up after ourselves. ) ( Numbers will be output in base 10 now. )
</lang>
A user-defined conversion might look something like this:
<lang quackery>
[ [] swap [ 2 /mod digit swap dip join dup not until ] drop reverse ] is bin ( n --> $ )
5 bin echo$ cr 50 bin echo$ cr 9000 bin echo$ cr
</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
R
<lang rsplus> dec2bin <- function(num) {
ifelse(num == 0, 0, sub("^0+","",paste(rev(as.integer(intToBits(num))), collapse = "")) )
}
for (anumber in c(0, 5, 50, 9000)) {
cat(dec2bin(anumber),"\n")
} </lang> output
0 101 110010 10001100101000
Racket
<lang racket>
- lang racket
- Option 1
- binary formatter
(for ([i 16]) (printf "~b\n" i))
- Option 2
- explicit conversion
(for ([i 16]) (displayln (number->string i 2))) </lang>
Raku
(formerly Perl 6)
<lang perl6>say .fmt("%b") for 5, 50, 9000;</lang>
101 110010 10001100101000
Alternatively:
<lang perl6>say .base(2) for 5, 50, 9000;</lang>
101 110010 10001100101000
RapidQ
<lang vb> 'Convert Integer to binary string Print "bin 5 = ", bin$(5) Print "bin 50 = ",bin$(50) Print "bin 9000 = ",bin$(9000) sleep 10 </lang>
Red
<lang Red>Red []
foreach number [5 50 9000] [
;; any returns first not false value, used to cut leading zeroes binstr: form any [find enbase/base to-binary number 2 "1" "0"] print reduce [ pad/left number 5 binstr ]
] </lang> output
5 101 50 110010 9000 10001100101000
Retro
<lang Retro>9000 50 5 3 [ binary putn cr decimal ] times</lang>
REXX
This version handles the special case of zero simply.
simple version
Note: some REXX interpreters have a D2B [Decimal to Binary] BIF (built-in function).
Programming note: this REXX version depends on numeric digits being large enough to handle leading zeroes in this manner (by adding a zero (to the binary version) to force superfluous leading zero suppression).
<lang REXX>/*REXX program to convert several decimal numbers to binary (or base 2). */
numeric digits 1000 /*ensure we can handle larger numbers. */
@.=; @.1= 0
@.2= 5 @.3= 50 @.4= 9000
do j=1 while @.j\== /*compute until a NULL value is found.*/ y=x2b( d2x(@.j) ) + 0 /*force removal of extra leading zeroes*/ say right(@.j,20) 'decimal, and in binary:' y /*display the number to the terminal. */ end /*j*/ /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */</lang>
- output:
0 decimal, and in binary: 0 5 decimal, and in binary: 101 50 decimal, and in binary: 110010 9000 decimal, and in binary: 10001100101000
elegant version
This version handles the case of zero as a special case more elegantly.
The following versions depend on the setting of numeric digits such that the number in decimal can be expressed as a whole number.
<lang REXX>/*REXX program to convert several decimal numbers to binary (or base 2). */
@.=; @.1= 0
@.2= 5 @.3= 50 @.4= 9000
do j=1 while @.j\== /*compute until a NULL value is found.*/ y=strip( x2b( d2x( @.j )), 'L', 0) /*force removal of all leading zeroes.*/ if y== then y=0 /*handle the special case of 0 (zero).*/ say right(@.j,20) 'decimal, and in binary:' y /*display the number to the terminal. */ end /*j*/ /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */</lang>
- output is identical to the 1st REXX version.
concise version
This version handles the case of zero a bit more obtusely, but concisely. <lang REXX>/*REXX program to convert several decimal numbers to binary (or base 2). */ @.=; @.1= 0
@.2= 5 @.3= 50 @.4= 9000
do j=1 while @.j\== /*compute until a NULL value is found.*/ y=word( strip( x2b( d2x( @.j )), 'L', 0) 0, 1) /*elides all leading 0s, if null, use 0*/ say right(@.j,20) 'decimal, and in binary:' y /*display the number to the terminal. */ end /*j*/ /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */</lang>
- output is identical to the 1st REXX version.
conforming version
This REXX version conforms to the strict output requirements of this task (just show the binary output without any blanks). <lang REXX>/*REXX program to convert several decimal numbers to binary (or base 2). */
numeric digits 200 /*ensure we can handle larger numbers. */
@.=; @.1= 0
@.2= 5 @.3= 50 @.4= 9000 @.5=423785674235000123456789 @.6= 1e138 /*one quinquaquadragintillion ugh.*/
do j=1 while @.j\== /*compute until a NULL value is found.*/ y=strip( x2b( d2x( @.j )), 'L', 0) /*force removal of all leading zeroes.*/ if y== then y=0 /*handle the special case of 0 (zero).*/ say y /*display binary number to the terminal*/ end /*j*/ /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */</lang>
- output:
0 101 110010 10001100101000 1011001101111010111011110101001101111000000000000110001100000100111110100010101 101010111111101001000101110110100000111011011011110111100110100100000100100001111101101110011101000101110110001101101000100100100110000111001010101011110010001111100011110100010101011011111111000110101110111100001011100111110000000010101100110101001010001001001011000000110000010010010100010010000001110100101000011111001000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Ring
<lang ring> see "Number to convert : " give a n = 0 while pow(2,n+1) < a
n = n + 1
end
for i = n to 0 step -1
x = pow(2,i) if a >= x see 1 a = a - x else see 0 ok
next </lang>
Ruby
<lang ruby>[5,50,9000].each do |n|
puts "%b" % n
end</lang> or <lang ruby>for n in [5,50,9000]
puts n.to_s(2)
end</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Run BASIC
<lang runbasic>input "Number to convert:";a while 2^(n+1) < a
n = n + 1
wend
for i = n to 0 step -1
x = 2^i if a >= x then print 1; a = a - x else print 0; end if
next</lang>
- Output:
Number to convert:?9000 10001100101000
Rust
<lang rust>fn main() {
for i in 0..8 { println!("{:b}", i) }
}</lang> Outputs:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111
S-lang
<lang S-lang>define int_to_bin(d) {
variable m = 0x40000000, prn = 0, bs = ""; do { if (d & m) { bs += "1"; prn = 1; } else if (prn) bs += "0"; m = m shr 1;
} while (m);
if (bs == "") bs = "0"; return bs;
}
() = printf("%s\n", int_to_bin(5)); () = printf("%s\n", int_to_bin(50)); () = printf("%s\n", int_to_bin(9000));</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Scala
Scala has an implicit conversion from Int
to RichInt
which has a method toBinaryString
.
<lang scala>scala> (5 toBinaryString)
res0: String = 101
scala> (50 toBinaryString) res1: String = 110010
scala> (9000 toBinaryString) res2: String = 10001100101000</lang>
Scheme
<lang scheme>(display (number->string 5 2)) (newline) (display (number->string 50 2)) (newline) (display (number->string 9000 2)) (newline)</lang>
Seed7
This example uses the radix operator to write a number in binary.
<lang seed7>$ include "seed7_05.s7i";
const proc: main is func
local var integer: number is 0; begin for number range 0 to 16 do writeln(number radix 2); end for; end func;</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 10000
SequenceL
<lang sequencel>main := toBinaryString([5, 50, 9000]);
toBinaryString(number(0)) :=
let val := "1" when number mod 2 = 1 else "0"; in toBinaryString(floor(number/2)) ++ val when floor(number/2) > 0 else val;</lang>
- Output:
["101","110010","10001100101000"]
Sidef
<lang ruby>[5, 50, 9000].each { |n|
say n.as_bin;
}</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Simula
<lang simula>BEGIN
PROCEDURE OUTINTBIN(N); INTEGER N; BEGIN IF N > 1 THEN OUTINTBIN(N//2); OUTINT(MOD(N,2),1); END OUTINTBIN;
INTEGER SAMPLE; FOR SAMPLE := 5, 50, 9000 DO BEGIN OUTINTBIN(SAMPLE); OUTIMAGE; END;
END</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
SkookumScript
<lang javascript>println(5.binary) println(50.binary) println(9000.binary)</lang> Or looping over a list of numbers: <lang javascript>{5 50 9000}.do[println(item.binary)]</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Smalltalk
<lang smalltalk>5 printOn: Stdout radix:2 50 printOn: Stdout radix:2 9000 printOn: Stdout radix:2</lang> or: <lang smalltalk>#(5 50 9000) do:[:each | each printOn: Stdout radix:2. Stdout cr]</lang>
SNOBOL4
<lang snobol4>
define('bin(n,r)') :(bin_end)
bin bin = le(n,0) r :s(return) bin = bin(n / 2, REMDR(n,2) r) :(return) bin_end
output = bin(5) output = bin(50) output = bin(9000) end</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
SNUSP
<lang SNUSP>
/recurse\
$,binary!\@\>?!\@/<@\.#
! \=/ \=itoa=@@@+@+++++# /<+>- \ div2 \?!#-?/+# mod2
</lang>
Standard ML
<lang sml>print (Int.fmt StringCvt.BIN 5 ^ "\n"); print (Int.fmt StringCvt.BIN 50 ^ "\n"); print (Int.fmt StringCvt.BIN 9000 ^ "\n");</lang>
Swift
<lang Swift>for num in [5, 50, 9000] {
println(String(num, radix: 2))
}</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Tcl
<lang tcl>proc num2bin num {
# Convert to _fixed width_ big-endian 32-bit binary binary scan [binary format "I" $num] "B*" binval # Strip useless leading zeros by reinterpreting as a big decimal integer scan $binval "%lld"
}</lang> Demonstrating: <lang tcl>for {set x 0} {$x < 16} {incr x} {
puts [num2bin $x]
} puts "--------------" puts [num2bin 5] puts [num2bin 50] puts [num2bin 9000]</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 -------------- 101 110010 10001100101000
Or you can use the builtin format:
<lang tcl>foreach n {0 1 5 50 9000} {
puts [format "%4u: %b" $n $n]
}</lang>
- Output:
0: 0 1: 1 5: 101 50: 110010 9000: 10001100101000
TI-83 BASIC
Using Standard TI-83 BASIC <lang ti83b>PROGRAM:BINARY
- Disp "NUMBER TO"
- Disp "CONVERT:"
- Input A
- 0→N
- 0→B
- While 2^(N+1)≤A
- N+1→N
- End
- While N≥0
- iPart(A/2^N)→C
- 10^(N)*C+B→B
- If C=1
- Then
- A-2^N→A
- End
- N-1→N
- End
- Disp B</lang>
Alternate using a string to display larger numbers. <lang ti83b>PROGRAM:BINARY
- Input X
- " "→Str1
- Repeat X=0
:X/2→X :sub("01",2fPart(X)+1,1)+Str1→Str1 :iPart(X)→X
- End
- Str1</lang>
Using the baseInput() "real(25," function from Omnicalc <lang ti83b>PROGRAM:BINARY
- Disp "NUMBER TO"
- Disp "CONVERT"
- Input "Str1"
- Disp real(25,Str1,10,2)</lang>
More compact version: <lang ti83b>:Input "DEC: ",D
- " →Str1
- If not(D:"0→Str1
- While D>0
- If not(fPart(D/2:Then
- "0"+Str1→Str1
- Else
- "1"+Str1→Str1
- End
- iPart(D/2→D
- End
- Disp Str1
</lang>
uBasic/4tH
This will convert any decimal number to any base between 2 and 16. <lang>Do
Input "Enter base (1<X<17): "; b While (b < 2) + (b > 16)
Loop
Input "Enter number: "; n s = (n < 0) ' save the sign n = Abs(n) ' make number unsigned
For x = 0 Step 1 Until n = 0 ' calculate all the digits
@(x) = n % b n = n / b
Next x
If s Then Print "-"; ' reapply the sign
For y = x - 1 To 0 Step -1 ' print all the digits
If @(y) > 9 Then ' take care of hexadecimal digits Gosub @(y) * 10 Else Print @(y); ' print "decimal" digits Endif
Next y
Print ' finish the string End
100 Print "A"; : Return ' print hexadecimal digit 110 Print "B"; : Return 120 Print "C"; : Return 130 Print "D"; : Return 140 Print "E"; : Return 150 Print "F"; : Return</lang>
- Output:
Enter base (1<X<17): 2 Enter number: 9000 10001100101000 0 OK, 0:775
UNIX Shell
<lang sh># Define a function to output binary digits tobinary() {
# We use the bench calculator for our conversion echo "obase=2;$1"|bc
}
- Call the function with each of our values
tobinary 5 tobinary 50</lang>
VBA
2 ways :
1- Function DecToBin(ByVal Number As Long) As String
Arguments :
[Required] Number (Long) : should be a positive number
2- Function DecToBin2(ByVal Number As Long, Optional Places As Long) As String
Arguments :
[Required] Number (Long) : should be >= -512 And <= 511
[Optional] Places (Long) : the number of characters to use.
Note : If places is omitted, DecToBin2 uses the minimum number of characters necessary. Places is useful for padding the return value with leading 0s (zeros).
<lang vb> Option Explicit
Sub Main_Dec2bin() Dim Nb As Long Nb = 5
Debug.Print "The decimal value " & Nb & " should produce an output of : " & DecToBin(Nb) Debug.Print "The decimal value " & Nb & " should produce an output of : " & DecToBin2(Nb)
Nb = 50
Debug.Print "The decimal value " & Nb & " should produce an output of : " & DecToBin(Nb) Debug.Print "The decimal value " & Nb & " should produce an output of : " & DecToBin2(Nb)
Nb = 9000
Debug.Print "The decimal value " & Nb & " should produce an output of : " & DecToBin(Nb) Debug.Print "The decimal value " & Nb & " should produce an output of : " & DecToBin2(Nb)
End Sub
Function DecToBin(ByVal Number As Long) As String Dim strTemp As String
Do While Number > 1 strTemp = Number - 2 * (Number \ 2) & strTemp Number = Number \ 2 Loop DecToBin = Number & strTemp
End Function
Function DecToBin2(ByVal Number As Long, Optional Places As Long) As String
If Number > 511 Then DecToBin2 = "Error : Number is too large ! (Number must be < 511)" ElseIf Number < -512 Then DecToBin2 = "Error : Number is too small ! (Number must be > -512)" Else If Places = 0 Then DecToBin2 = WorksheetFunction.Dec2Bin(Number) Else DecToBin2 = WorksheetFunction.Dec2Bin(Number, Places) End If End If
End Function </lang>
- Output:
The decimal value 5 should produce an output of : 101 The decimal value 5 should produce an output of : 101 The decimal value 50 should produce an output of : 110010 The decimal value 50 should produce an output of : 110010 The decimal value 9000 should produce an output of : 10001100101000 The decimal value 9000 should produce an output of : Error : Number is too large ! (Number must be < 511)
Vedit macro language
This implementation reads the numeric values from user input and writes the converted binary values in the edit buffer. <lang vedit>repeat (ALL) {
#10 = Get_Num("Give a numeric value, -1 to end: ", STATLINE) if (#10 < 0) { break } Call("BINARY") Update()
} return
- BINARY:
do {
Num_Ins(#10 & 1, LEFT+NOCR) #10 = #10 >> 1 Char(-1)
} while (#10 > 0) EOL Ins_Newline Return </lang> Example output when values 0, 1, 5, 50 and 9000 were entered:
0 1 101 110010 10001100101000
Vim Script
<lang vim>function Num2Bin(n)
let n = a:n let s = "" if n == 0 let s = "0" else while n if n % 2 == 0 let s = "0" . s else let s = "1" . s endif let n = n / 2 endwhile endif return s
endfunction
echo Num2Bin(5) echo Num2Bin(50) echo Num2Bin(9000)</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Visual Basic
<lang vb> Public Function Bin(ByVal l As Long) As String Dim i As Long
If l Then If l And &H80000000 Then 'negative number Bin = "1" & String$(31, "0") l = l And (Not &H80000000) For i = 0 To 30 If l And (2& ^ i) Then Mid$(Bin, Len(Bin) - i) = "1" End If Next i Else 'positive number Do While l If l Mod 2 Then Bin = "1" & Bin Else Bin = "0" & Bin End If l = l \ 2 Loop End If Else Bin = "0" 'zero End If
End Function
'testing: Public Sub Main()
Debug.Print Bin(5) Debug.Print Bin(50) Debug.Print Bin(9000)
End Sub </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Visual Basic .NET
<lang vbnet>Module Program
Sub Main For Each number In {5, 50, 9000} Console.WriteLine(Convert.ToString(number, 2)) Next End Sub
End Module</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Visual FoxPro
<lang vfp>
- !* Binary Digits
CLEAR k = CAST(5 As I) ? NToBin(k) k = CAST(50 As I) ? NToBin(k) k = CAST(9000 As I) ? NToBin(k)
FUNCTION NTOBin(n As Integer) As String LOCAL i As Integer, b As String, v As Integer b = "" v = HiBit(n) FOR i = 0 TO v
b = IIF(BITTEST(n, i), "1", "0") + b
ENDFOR RETURN b ENDFUNC
FUNCTION HiBit(n As Double) As Integer
- !* Find the highest power of 2 in n
LOCAL v As Double v = LOG(n)/LOG(2) RETURN FLOOR(v) ENDFUNC </lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
Whitespace
This program prints binary numbers until the internal representation of the current integer overflows to -1; it will never do so on some interpreters. It is almost an exact duplicate of Count in octal#Whitespace.
<lang Whitespace>
</lang>
It was generated from the following pseudo-Assembly.
<lang asm>push 0
- Increment indefinitely.
0:
push -1 ; Sentinel value so the printer knows when to stop. copy 1 call 1 push 10 ochr push 1 add jump 0
- Get the binary digits on the stack in reverse order.
1:
dup push 2 mod swap push 2 div push 0 copy 1 sub jn 1 pop
- Print them.
2:
dup jn 3 ; Stop at the sentinel. onum jump 2
3:
pop ret</lang>
Wortel
Using JavaScripts buildin toString method on the Number object, the following function takes a number and returns a string with the binary representation: <lang wortel>\.toString 2
- the following function also casts the string to a number
^(@+ \.toString 2)</lang> To output to the console: <lang wortel>@each ^(console.log \.toString 2) [5 50 900]</lang>
Outputs:
101 110010 1110000100
Wren
<lang ecmascript>import "/fmt" for Fmt
System.print("Converting to binary:") for (i in [5, 50, 9000]) {
System.print("%(i) -> %(Fmt.b(0, i))")
}</lang>
- Output:
Converting to binary: 5 -> 101 50 -> 110010 9000 -> 10001100101000
X86 Assembly
Translation of XPL0. Assemble with tasm, tlink /t <lang asm> .model tiny
.code .486 org 100h
start: mov ax, 5
call binout call crlf mov ax, 50 call binout call crlf mov ax, 9000 call binout
crlf: mov al, 0Dh ;new line
int 29h mov al, 0Ah int 29h ret
binout: push ax
shr ax, 1 je bo10 call binout
bo10: pop ax
and al, 01h or al, '0' int 29h ;display character ret end start</lang>
- Output:
101 110010 10001100101000
XPL0
<lang XPL0>include c:\cxpl\codes; \intrinsic code declarations
proc BinOut(N); \Output N in binary int N; int R; [R:= N&1; N:= N>>1; if N then BinOut(N); ChOut(0, R+^0); ];
int I; [I:= 0; repeat BinOut(I); CrLf(0);
I:= I+1;
until KeyHit or I=0; ]</lang>
- Output:
0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 ... 100000010011110 100000010011111 100000010100000 100000010100001
zkl
<lang zkl>(9000).toString(2)</lang> <lang zkl>T(5,50,9000).apply("toString",2) //--> L("101","110010","10001100101000")</lang> <lang zkl>"%.2B".fmt(9000)</lang>
ZX Spectrum Basic
<lang zxbasic>10 LET n=5: GO SUB 1000: PRINT s$ 20 LET n=50: GO SUB 1000: PRINT s$ 30 LET n=9000: GO SUB 1000: PRINT s$ 999 STOP 1000 REM convert to binary 1010 LET t=n: REM temporary variable 1020 LET s$="": REM this will contain our binary digits 1030 LET sf=0: REM output has not started yet 1040 FOR l=126 TO 0 STEP -1 1050 LET d$="0": REM assume next digit is zero 1060 IF t>=(2^l) THEN LET d$="1": LET t=t-(2^l): LET sf=1 1070 IF (sf <> 0) THEN LET s$=s$+d$ 1080 NEXT l 1090 RETURN</lang>
- Programming Tasks
- Basic language learning
- Radices
- 0815
- 11l
- 360 Assembly
- 6502 Assembly
- 8080 Assembly
- 8th
- AArch64 Assembly
- ACL2
- Action!
- Ada
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- Zkl
- ZX Spectrum Basic