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I had a calculus professor who suggested we should be using base 12 number system. What are the advantages of using such a system?

azimut
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marabutt
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3 Answers3

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As I see it, there are two advantages. First, it's not too different from base 10, so it comes fairly naturally. Second, 12 has many divisors, so $1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/6, 1/8, 1/9, 1/12,\ldots$ would all be terminating decimals.

vadim123
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    Actually, the base 12 number system seems to have been common in the past, exactly due to 12 having many divisors. We even have traces of it in many languages (eleven and twelve, not oneteen and twoteen) – vsz May 15 '13 at 06:23
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More factors: 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/6 (and sometimes 1/12) are common fractions, which would turn out "even" (not infinite). The Babylonians where on to something with their base-60 system...

vonbrand
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Well, in the base $10$ number system it is as easy to multiply by 5 as to divide by 2 (the answers differ by 0 at the end). And it is as easy to multiply by 2, 4, 8... as to divide by 5, 25, 125..., by the same reason. So in the base $12$ number system it is as hard to divide by 2,3,4,6,12,4,9,16... as to multiply by 6,4,3,2,1,36,16,9..., and, therefore, one can trade division to multiplication in more instances...

DVD
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