The question asks about "a digital system". There are many examples of digital systems using either mechanical or electromechanical hardware, often decimal.
You are the one who keeps trying to limit the discussion to binary hardware, on your own authority.
Yes, digital is limited to binary hardware, you can encode any kind of information with binary hardware, you can show binary, octal, decimal, hexadecimal numbers with digital circuit and even more, you can display alphabet letters and hierogylphs, but it still remains binary, because uses binary signals with two discrete values 0 and 1.
I understand your opinion that all components are digital because they using different kind of numbers and you can use it for yourself, you can name analog output of sound card DAC as digital signal as tggzzz proposed, you can use it for yourself usage. But this is not what term "digital" means in modern electronics.
So, if you want so other people can understand what you're talking about, you're needs to use word "digital" for components which has digital interface, that is, an interface using binary signals. Because term digital means binary digits. And as we discussed before there is no example of digital circuit that uses non binary signals. Even experimental ternary computers implemented with digital circuit which uses binary signals. So there is no sense to talk about existence of non existing things just to protect incorrect usage of word digital for analog signals.
Just because when you're talking about analog output of DAC as example of digital signal or talking about mechanical calculator as example of digital circuit, you will confuse other peoples... They will not understand what you're talking about.
Just to be clear. DAC is mixed signal component, because it uses two interfaces - digital and analog:
- Digital interface of DAC uses binary signals and is used to receive digital data from digital circuit (represented as binary bits, encoding doesn't matters)
- Analog interface of DAC uses analog signal and is used to output analog signal which is result of conversion from digital data (represented as binary bits).
You cannot name analog output of DAC as digital signal, because it is analog and is incompatible with digital interfaces. And from my opinion it is pretty clear for any engineer and don't requires explanations.
Regarding to SSD, it can use analog signals inside, and their circuit can be mixed signal, but since it expose only digital interface, you can consider it as pure digital component and use in digital system.