How many values can be represented with n bits?

Okay, since it already "leaked": You're missing zero, so the correct answer is 512 (511 is the greatest one, but it's 0 to 511, not 1 to 511).

By the way, an good followup exercise would be to generalize this:

How many different values can be represented in n binary digits (bits)?

A better way to solve it is to start small.

Let's start with 1 bit. Which can either be 1 or 0. That's 2 values, or 10 in binary.

Now 2 bits, which can either be 00, 01, 10 or 11 That's 4 values, or 100 in binary... See the pattern?


What you're missing: Zero is a value


29 = 512 values, because that's how many combinations of zeroes and ones you can have.


What those values represent however will depend on the system you are using. If it's an unsigned integer, you will have:

000000000 = 0 (min)
000000001 = 1
...
111111110 = 510
111111111 = 511 (max)

In two's complement, which is commonly used to represent integers in binary, you'll have:

000000000 = 0
000000001 = 1
...
011111110 = 254
011111111 = 255 (max)
100000000 = -256 (min) <- yay integer overflow
100000001 = -255
...
111111110 = -2
111111111 = -1

In general, with k bits you can represent 2k values. Their range will depend on the system you are using:

Unsigned: 0 to 2k-1
Signed: -2k-1 to 2k-1-1

Tags:

Binary

Bits