Serial decimal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia In computers, a serial decimal numeric representation is one in which ten bits are reserved for each digit, with a different bit turned on depending on which of the ten possible digits is intended. ENIAC and CALDIC used this representation.[1] See also Bit-serial architecture Digit-serial architecture 1-of-10 code One-hot code References [1]tjhsst.edu This computer-storage-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.vte Related Articles