Difference between revisions of "Binary operation"
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| − | A '''binary operation''' is an [[operation]] which takes two arguments. | + | A '''binary operation''' is an [[operation]] which takes two arguments. Usually this takes an input and encodes it into machine code or binary. Then it returns a bit based on 2 bits, one from each string on their corresponding index. There are several binary operations that people tend to use a lot. Let's get to them: |
| + | |||
| + | '''AND''' | ||
| + | \begin{tabular}{cc|c} | ||
| + | <math>a</math> & <math>b</math> & expression \\ | ||
| + | \hline | ||
| + | True & True & True \\ | ||
| + | True & False & False \\ | ||
| + | False & False & False \\ | ||
| + | False & True & False \\ | ||
| + | \end{tabular} | ||
Revision as of 18:26, 30 April 2024
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A binary operation is an operation which takes two arguments. Usually this takes an input and encodes it into machine code or binary. Then it returns a bit based on 2 bits, one from each string on their corresponding index. There are several binary operations that people tend to use a lot. Let's get to them:
AND
\begin{tabular}{cc|c}
&
& expression \\
\hline
True & True & True \\
True & False & False \\
False & False & False \\
False & True & False \\
\end{tabular}