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CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old

I learned a while ago of the existence of old Soviet ternary computers and have been doing some reading about how a ternary computer would operate different from a binary one.

In a binary system, the smallest unit of data is the bit (binary digit). What would the smallest unit of data be in a ternary system?

in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old

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in reply to Isaac Ji Kuo

CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old
@Isaac Ji Kuo Yeah, while I'm still wrapping my brain around this system, I love how elegantly it handles negative numbers. Twos compliment in binary always felt a little hacky to me.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old
@Isaac Ji Kuo That said, I'm a little scared to think about how floating points work... though it's probably easier than I think.
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old

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in reply to Isaac Ji Kuo

CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old
@Isaac Ji Kuo I don't imagine here's an IEEE standard for ternary floating point values? (I wouldn't expect so.)
in reply to Jonathan Lamothe

CW: nerdy observation that appeals to my inner twelve-year-old

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