TERNARY NUMERAL SYSTEM


'Ternary' or 'trinary' is the base- numeral system. Ternary digits are known as ''trits'' ('tr'inary dig'it'), with a name analogous to "bit". One trit contains about 1.58596 (log_2 3) bit of information. Although ''ternary'' most often refers to a system in which the three digits, , , and , are all nonnegative integers, the adjective also lends its name to the balanced ternary system, used in comparison logic and ternary computers.

Contents
Comparison to other radixes
Compared to decimal and binary
Compact ternary representation: base 9 and 27
Practical usage
External links

Comparison to other radixes


Compared to decimal and binary

Representations of integer numbers in ternary do not get uncomfortably lengthy as quickly as in binary. For example, decimal 365 corresponds to binary 101101101 (9 digits) and to ternary 111112 (6 digits). However, they are still far less compact than the corresponding representations in bases such as decimal — see below for a compact way to codify ternary using nonary and septemvigesimal.
'Numbers one to twenty-seven in standard ternary'
Ternary 1 2 10 11 12 20 21 22 100
Binary 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 1001
Decimal '1' '2' '3' '4' '5' '6' '7' '8' '9'
Ternary 101 102 110 111 112 120 121 122 200
Binary 1010 1011 1100 1101 1110 1111 10000 10001 10010
Decimal '10' '11' '12' '13' '14' '15' '16' '17' '18'
Ternary 201 202 210 211 212 220 221 222 1000
Binary 10011 10100 10101 10110 10111 11000 11001 11010 11011
Decimal '19' '20' '21' '22' '23' '24' '25' '26' '27'

'Powers of three in ternary'
Ternary 1 10 100 1 000 10 000
Binary 1 11 1001 1 1011 101 0001
Decimal 1 3 9 27 81
Power '30' '31' '32' '33' '34'
Ternary 100 000 1 000 000 10 000 000 100 000 000 1 000 000 000
Binary 1111 0011 10 1101 1001 1000 1000 1011 1 1001 1010 0001 100 1100 1110 0011
Decimal 243 729 2 187 6 561 19 683
Power '35' '36' '37' '38' '39'

As for rational numbers, ternary offers a convenient way to represent one third (as opposed to its cumbersome representation as an infinite string of recurring digits in decimal); but a major drawback is that, in turn, ternary does not offer a finite representation for the most basic fraction: one half (and thus, neither for one quarter, one sixth, one eighth, one tenth, etc.), because 2 is not a prime factor of the base.
'Fractions in ternary'
Ternary 0.111111111111... 0.1 0.020202020202... 0.012101210121... 0.011111111111... 0.010212010212...
Binary 0.1 0.010101010101... 0.01 0.001100110011... 0.00101010101... 0.001001001001...
Decimal 0.5 0.333333333333... 0.25 0.2 0.166666666666... 0.142857142857...
Fraction '1/2' '1/3' '1/4' '1/5' '1/6' '1/7'
Ternary 0.010101010101... 0.01 0.002200220022... 0.002110021100... 0.002020202020... 0.002002002002...
Binary 0.001 0.000111000111... 0.000110011001... 0.000101110100... 0.000101010101... 0.000100111011...
Decimal 0.125 0.111111111111... 0.1 0.090909090909... 0.083333333333... 0.076923076923...
Fraction '1/8' '1/9' '1/10' '1/11' '1/12' '1/13'

Compact ternary representation: base 9 and 27

Nonary (base 9, each digit is two ternary digits) or septemvigesimal (base 27, each digit is three ternary digits) is often used, similar to how octal and hexadecimal systems are used in place of binary. Ternary also has a unit similar to a byte, the tryte, which is six ternary digits.
Practical usage

A base-three system is used in Islam to keep track of counting Tasbih to 99 or to 100 on a single hand for counting prayers (as alternative for the Misbaha). The benefit —apart from allowing a single hand to count up to 99 or to 100— is that counting doesn't distract the mind too much since the counter needs only to divide Tasbihs into groups of three.
A rare 'ternary point' is used to denote fractional parts of an inning in baseball. Since each inning consists of 3 outs, each out is considered egin{matrix} rac{1}{3} end{matrix} (one third) of an inning and is denoted as '.1'. For example, if a player pitched all of the 4th, 5th and 6th innings, plus 2 outs of the 7th inning, his Innings pitched column for that game would be listed as '3.2', meaning 3 egin{matrix} rac{2}{3} end{matrix}. (In this usage, only the fractional part of the number is written in ternary form.)
Ternary numbers can be used to convey self-similar structures like a Sierpinski Triangle or a Cantor set conveniently.
Ternary encoding can also be applied in most Relational Databases, with NULL acting as the third trit. By manually encoding datatypes it is possible to effectively reduce the storage requirements by a third.

External links



Third Base (PDF)

Ternary Arithmetic

The ternary calculating machine of Thomas Fowler

Ternary Base Conversion includes fractional part, from Math Is Fun

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