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Exam code:9618

Binary prefixes

What is a binary prefix?

  • A binary prefix is a unit prefix used to indicate multiples of bytes in binary

  • Consider the word kilobyte, “kilo” is the prefix

  • Bytes are the smallest unit of data that can be stored in a computer so there needs to be a way of expressing bytes in larger multiples

Denary prefixes

  • A common way of expressing multiples of bytes is to use denary prefixes:

Denary unit

Equivalent size (bytes)

1 kilobyte (1 KB)

1000

1 megabyte (1 MB)

1,000,000

1 gigabyte (1 GB)

1,000,000,000

1 terabyte (1 TB)

1,000,000,000,000

1 petabyte (1 PB)

1,000,000,000,000,000

  • This system relies on the assumption that 1 kilo = 1000

  • This assumption is based on the denary (base 10) number system

    • E.g. a 1 GB hard drive can store 1 x 109 bytes

Binary prefixes

  • However, computers use the binary (base 2) number system so the denary system is technically inaccurate when describing storage

  • To be precise, expressing multiples of bytes is done using binary prefixes:

Binary unit

Number of bytes (base 2)

Equivalent size (base 10)

1 kibibyte (1 KiB)

210

1024

1 mebibyte (1 MiB)

220

1,048,576

1 gibibyte (1 GiB)

230

1,073,741,824

1 tebibyte (1 TiB)

240

1,099,511,627,776

1 pebibyte (1 PiB)

250

1,125,899,906,842,624

  • Notice the prefixes change depending on the system being used, e.g. kilo (denary) vs kibi (binary)

Why does it matter?

  • The importance of the system being used depends on how precise you need to be

  • Identifying the total amount of memory (RAM) available to a computer must be accurate (use binary prefixes)

    • E.g. 16 GiB RAM can store 16 x 230 bytes of data (17,179,869,184 bytes)

  • when describing storage space, a rough estimate is acceptable (use denary prefixes)

    • E.g. a 16 GB memory stick can store 16 x 109 bytes of data (16,000,000,000 bytes)

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