Septenary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Numeral systems by culture
Hindu-Arabic numerals
Indian
Eastern Arabic
Khmer
Indian family
Brahmi
Thai
East Asian numerals
Chinese
Suzhou
Counting rods
Japanese
Korean 
Alphabetic numerals
Abjad
Armenian
Cyrillic
Ge'ez
Hebrew
Greek (Ionian)
Āryabhaṭa
 
Other systems
Attic
Babylonian
Egyptian
Etruscan
Mayan
Roman
Urnfield
List of numeral system topics
Positional systems by base
Decimal (10)
2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64
1, 3, 9, 12, 20, 24, 30, 36, 60, more…
v  d  e

The septenary numeral system is the base-7 number system, and uses the digits 0-6.

Fractions expressed in septenary will repeat a sequence of digits unless the denominator is a power of seven. Few fractions can be expressed in a finite number of digits:

Decimal Septimal (periodic part)
1/2 1/2 = 0.3...
1/3 1/3 = 0.2...
1/4 1/4 = 0.15...
1/5 1/5 = 0.1254...
1/6 1/6 = 0.1...
1/7 1/10 = 0.1
1/8 1/11 = 0.06...
1/9 1/12 = 0.053...
1/10 1/13 = 0.0462...
1/12 1/15 = 0.04...
1/14 1/20 = 0.03...
1/15 1/21 = 0.0316...
1/16 1/22 = 0.03...
1/18 1/24 = 0.025...
1/19 1/25 = 0.024...
1/20 1/26 = 0.0231...
1/21 1/30 = 0.02...
1/24 1/33 = 0.02...
... ...
1/49 1/100 = 0.01



The times tables in base 7:

- 1 2 3 4 5 6 10
1 1 2 3 4 5 6 10
2 2 4 6 11 13 15 20
3 3 6 12 15 21 24 30
4 4 11 15 22 26 33 40
5 5 13 21 26 34 42 50
6 6 15 24 33 42 51 60
10 10 20 30 40 50 60 100

Also in base 7: π = 3.0663651432... e = 2.5012410654...



One advantage of this system is that 3.1 (22/7) is a reasonably good approximation for Pi.

[edit] In Fiction

  • In the TV series Doctor Who the time lords employ a number system using base 7.
  • The Halo 3 Alternate Reality Game "IRIS" used a countdown clock in base-7.
Languages