Counting in binary on your fingers is like using secret finger signals to tell bigger numbers than you normally can.
Imagine each finger on one hand is a special switch, it can be on (up) or off (down). If we use just one finger, we can show two things: off (0) or on (1). But if we add more fingers, like the ones on your whole hand, each one adds a new power of 2.
How Binary Works with Fingers
Think about it like stacking blocks:
- Your thumb is 1 (like 1 block).
- Your index finger is 2 (like 2 blocks).
- Middle finger is 4.
- Ring finger is 8.
- Pinky is 16.
So if your thumb and pinky are up, that’s 1 + 16 = 17, just like counting with blocks. You can count all the way to 31 using one hand!
Why It's Cool
It feels like magic, but it’s just clever switches, like a light switch in your room. On means “yes,” off means “no.” Each finger is a switch, and together they make a bigger number.
You already know how to count with fingers, now you can count faster!
Examples
- Counting from 0 to 1 using just one finger
- Learning how to represent the number 5 with two fingers raised
Ask a question
See also
- How to count to 1000 on two hands?
- Why Do We Use ‘Fingers’ for Counting and What Are the Alternatives?
- Why Do Numbers Seem to Multiply When You Count Coins?
- What are ten fingers?
- How Does a Computer (Physically) Read Code?