Thursday, October 30, 2014

New Binary Code

For my binary code instead of 0s and 1s, I chose to represent the 1s with *s and the 0s with #s.

Example:
In traditional binary 0100000101011000110001111001101001001001001010111000100 is code for saying hello friend in a text messege .
For my binary code that code is the same as #*#####*#*#**###**###****##**#*##*##*##*##*#*#***###*##  and gives you the same text as hello friend.

6 comments:

  1. I really like your binary code. It is similar to mine but I used
    @ and #. You system for binary really seems to relate to my style which I think is the reason I am able to comprehend it so well. Why did you decide to use # and *? Did you pick it at random or did you have a reasoning behind it?

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    1. I looked at yours and also said that ours were very similar! I picked the symbols at random.

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  2. I thought that your binary code was very creative. It represented the 0 and 1 very well and I think it was easy to understand. I think that you did a very good job with writing the letters and I liked your sentence.

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  3. Is there any specific reason why you chose these symbols out of the whole keyboard?

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for your nice comment. I picked the symbols at random.

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  4. I like your binary code. It's easy to understand and it's very unique from others that I have looked at.

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