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1 (number)

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
← 0 1 2 →
-1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Cardinalone, ieh /ˈ/, unit, unity
Ordinal1st
(first)
Numeral systemunary
Factorization1
Divisors1
Greek numeralΑ´
Roman numeralI
Roman numeral (unicode)Ⅰ, ⅰ
Greek prefixmono- /haplo-
Latin prefixuni-
Binary12
Ternary13
Quaternary14
Quinary15
Senary16
Octal18
Duodecimal112
Hexadecimal116
Vigesimal120
Base 36136
Greek numeralα'
Persian١ - یک
Arabic١
Urdu
Ge'ez
Bengali & Assamese
Chinese numeral一,弌,壹
Korean일, 하나
Devanāgarī
Telugu
Tamil
Kannada
Hebrewא (alef)
Khmer
Thai
Malayalam
Counting rod𝍠
Chinese hand sign
Pronunciation of the number 1.

One (1) is the first natural number, followed by two. The Roman numeral for one is I.

Mathematics

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In mathematics, the number one is the multiplicative identity.[1] It is also the only number for which these special facts are true:

  • Any number multiplied by one equals that number: . For example, .
  • Any number divided by one equals that number: . For example, .
  • Any number , except zero, divided by itself equals one: . For example: .
  • One cannot be divided by any other number bigger than itself so that the result is a natural number.

In mathematics, 0.999... is a repeating decimal that is equal to 1. Many proofs have been made to show this is correct.[2][3]

Computer science

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One is important for computer science, because the binary numeral system uses only ones and zeroes to represent numbers. In machine code and many programming languages, one means "true" (or "yes") and zero means "false" (or "no").

Other meanings

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  • In Germany and Austria, one is the grade for "very good". It is the best grade of six possible grades in Germany, and the best of five possible grades in Austria. In the Netherlands, one is the lowest grade, and ten the highest. In Poland, one is also the lowest grade, and the highest is six.
  • In numerology, the number one is a symbol for everything (unity), the beginning, and God.
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References

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  1. Weisstein, Eric W. "1". mathworld.wolfram.com. Retrieved 2020-09-22.
  2. Byers, William (2007). How Mathematicians Think: Using Ambiguity, Contradiction, and Paradox to Create Mathematics. Princeton UP. pp. 39–41. ISBN 978-0-691-12738-5.
  3. Richman, Fred (December 1999). "Is 0.999... = 1?". Mathematics Magazine. 72 (5): 396–400. doi:10.2307/2690798. JSTOR 2690798. Free HTML preprint: Richman, Fred (June 1999). "Is 0.999... = 1?". Archived from the original on 2 September 2006. Retrieved 23 August 2006. Note: the journal article contains material and wording not found in the preprint.