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{{Short description|Hexadecimal number system}}
[[Image:Table de correspondance entre le Bibinaire et les autres notations.svg|520px|thumb|right|
The '''Bibi-binary''' system for numeric notation (
The notational system directly and logically encodes the binary representations of the digits in a hexadecimal (base sixteen)
The description of the language first appeared in ''Les Cerveaux non-humains'' ("Non-human brains"),<ref>Jean-Marc Font, Jean-Claude Quiniou, Gérard Verroust, ''Les Cerveaux non-humains : introduction à l'Informatique'', Denoël, Paris, 1970.</ref> and the system can also be found in ''Boby Lapointe'' by Huguette Long Lapointe.<ref>Huguette Long Lapointe, ''Boby Lapointe'', Encre, Paris, 1980 {{ISBN|2-86418-148-7}}</ref>
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The central observation driving this system is that sixteen can be written as 2 to the power of 2, to the power of 2. As we use the term [[binary number|binary]] for numbers written in base two, Lapointe reasoned that one could also say "bi-binary" for base four, and thus "bibi-binary" for base 16. Its name may also be a pun,
== Pronunciation ==
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HO, HA, HE, HI, BO, BA, BE, BI, KO, KA, KE, KI, DO, DA, DE, DI.
To express any number, it suffices to enumerate the (hexadecimal) digits that make it up. For example: the number written as "2000" in
== References ==
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