Use the following input boxes to translate to or from letters to binary.
How does this work? The system converts letters to upper case and removes all non-alpha characters (A-Z). It then takes each letter and converts it to binary. You can use the table below to see how it translates the letters:
| Decimal | Binary | Letter |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | 00000 | A |
| 1 | 00001 | B |
| 2 | 00010 | C |
| 3 | 00011 | D |
| 4 | 00100 | E |
| 5 | 00101 | F |
| 6 | 00110 | G |
| 7 | 00111 | H |
| 8 | 01000 | I |
| 9 | 01001 | J |
| 10 | 01010 | K |
| 11 | 01011 | L |
| 12 | 01100 | M |
| 13 | 01101 | N |
| 14 | 01110 | O |
| 15 | 01111 | P |
| 16 | 10000 | Q |
| 17 | 10001 | R |
| 18 | 10010 | S |
| 19 | 10011 | T |
| 20 | 10100 | U |
| 21 | 10101 | V |
| 22 | 10110 | W |
| 23 | 10111 | X |
| 24 | 11000 | Y |
| 25 | 11001 | Z |
Tags: binary, binary translator, english, translate
This entry was posted on Wednesday, March 31st, 2010 at 3:02 pm and is filed under For Fun. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Very cool, Chris!