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50 in binary

The decimal number 50 written in binary is 110010. In hexadecimal it is 32, and in octal 62.

50 in binary110010
BaseValue
Decimal (base 10)50
Binary (base 2)110010
Hexadecimal (base 16)32
Octal (base 8)62

How 50 converts to binary

Binary is base 2, so each place is worth twice the one to its right: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, and so on. Adding up the place values that have a 1 gives back the decimal number:

32 + 16 + 2 = 50

That is why 50 in decimal is 110010 in binary: it is exactly the set of powers of two that add up to 50. To get the hexadecimal form, group the bits into fours from the right and write each group as one hex digit, which gives 32.

Convert any number

Type any value and watch all three bases update live in the binary converter, or read the theory behind it in the lessons on binary numbers and hexadecimal.

Want to build the circuit that does this? Open the lab and wire up an adder, or follow the free course from a single transistor up to an 8-bit CPU.

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Frequently asked

What is 50 in binary?

50 in binary is 110010. That is the sum of the powers of two 32 + 16 + 2, which add up to 50.

What is 50 in hexadecimal?

50 in hexadecimal is 32. You get it by grouping the binary digits 110010 into fours from the right and writing each group as one hex digit.

How many bits is 50?

50 needs 6 bits in binary (110010). It fits in a single 8-bit byte.