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Balanced ternary

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Balanced ternary is a type of numbering system with a base of 3.

The most common numbering system in use today is decimal. Decimal has a base of ten, so it has 10 digits: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9. Ternary has a base of three, so it has only 3 digits: 0, 1 and 2. Balanced ternary also has a base of three, but it uses the digits -1, 0 and 1.

Like decimal, balanced ternary uses a place value system. Each place value is equal to the previous place value multiplied by the base. In decimal, we have a one's place, a ten's place, a hundred's place, a thousand's place, and so on. In balanced ternary, we have a one's place, a three's place, a nine's place, a twenty-seven's place, and so on.

Balanced ternary allows you to write numbers less than zero without needing a dedicated minus sign; if the digit with the biggest place-value is negative, the entire number is negative. Another benefit is that when it comes to computers, there are much fewer rounding errors.

Comparing systems

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Most balanced ternary systems use the letter T or the symbol ! for the -1 digit. This article will use the letter T.

Base10TernaryBalanced
Ternary
B. ternary
expanded
1111x1
221t1x3 + -1x1
310101x3 + 0x1
411111x3 + 1x1
5121tt1x9 + -1x3 + -1x1
6201t01x9 + -1x3 + 0x1
7211t11x9 + -1x3 + 1x1
82210t1x9 + 0x3 + -1x1
91001001x9 + 0x3 + 0x1
101011011x9 + 0x3 + 1x1
Base10TernaryBalanced
Ternary
B. ternary
expanded
-1-1t-1x1
-2-2t1-1x3 + 1x1
-3-10t0-1x3 + 0x1
-4-11tt-1x3 + -1x1
-5-12t11-1x9 + 1x3 + 1x1
-6-20t10-1x9 + 1x3 + 0x1
-9-21t1t-1x9 + 1x3 + -1x1
-8-22t01-1x9 + 0x3 + 1x1
-9-100t00-1x9 + 0x3 + 0x1
-10-101t0t=1x9 + 0x3 + -1x1