One half
|
½ | |
prefixes | hemi- (from Greek) |
Binary | 0.1 or
00111111000000000000000000000000 in single-precision floating point |
Decimal | 0.5 |
Hexadecimal | 0.8 or
3F000000 in single-precision floating point |
Continued fraction | [0; 1, 1] or [0; 2] |
One half is the irreducible fraction resulting from dividing one by two (½), or any number by its double; multiplication by one half is equivalent to division by two. It is the fraction occurring most often in mathematical equations, recipes, measurements, etc.
For instance, the area S of a triangle is computed
- S = ½ × base × altitude
One half also figures in the formula for calculating figurate numbers, such as triangular numbers and pentagonal numbers:
- ½ × n ( ( s - 2 ) n - ( 4 - s ) )
and in the formula for computing magic constants for magic squares
- M2(n) = ½ × ( n ( n2 + 1 ) )
One half is also:
- One of the few fractions to get a key of its own on typewriters. It also gets its own point in some early extensions of ASCII at 189; and in Unicode, it gets its own code point at 189 in the C1 Controls and Latin-1 Supplement block, and a cross-reference in the Number Forms block, which contains some other fractions.
- One of the few fractions which is commonly expressed in natural languages by suppletion rather than regular derivation; compare English one half with regular formations like one sixth from six.