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Hexadecimal to Denary Conversion

Converting hexadecimal (base-16) numbers to denary (base-10) is an essential skill, and a guaranteed exam question!

Denary numbers are 0 – 9.
Hexadecimal numbers are 0 – 15, with numbers after 9 represented by letters A – F.


The easiest method is to use binary as a middle step. Let's go through the process and convert this hexadecimal number to denary…

C1

Step 1: Split the Bits

Split the two hexadecimal numbers into single digits.

C1
 
C 1

Step 2: Convert Digits to Denary

Convert each digit to denary.

For numbers 0 – 9, it will be the same. For numbers A – F, use 10 – 15.

C=12

C in hex is equivalent to 12 in denary.

1=1

1 less than 10, so it is the same in hexadecimal and denary.


Step 3: Convert to Binary Nibbles

Convert each denary digit into a nibble (a four-bit binary number).

12 =

8 4 2 1
1100

1 =

8 4 2 1
0001

Step 4: Join into a Byte

Put our two binary nibbles together to create one byte.

Remember to re-number the binary columns for the first nibble.

128 64 32 16   8 4 2 1
1100 0001

Step 5: Convert Binary to Denary

Finally, convert the whole binary byte into a decimal number.

128 64 32 16 8 4 2 1
11000001

128 + 64 + 1 = 193


The answer

We have now converted C116 to 19310.