"yep base-10 is what I mean"
In that case, yes, they can be extended to base-10 in several ways, though they aren’t nearly as useful as in binary.
One idea is that &, |, etc. are the same as doing arithmetic mod-2 to the individual binary digits. If a and b are single binary-digits, then
a & b = a * b (mod 2) a ^ b = a + b (mod 2) ~a = 1-a (mod 2) a | b = ~(~a & ~b) = 1 - (1-a)*(1-b) (mod 2)
The equivalents in base-10 would be (note again these are applied per-digit, not to the whole number)
a & b = a * b (mod 10) a ^ b = a + b (mod 10) ~a = 9-a (mod 10) a | b = ~(~a & ~b) = 9 - (9-a)*(9-b) (mod 10)
The first three are useful when designing circuits which use BCD (~a being the 9’s complement), such as non-graphing calculators, though we just use * and + rather than & and ^ when writing the equations. The first is also apparently used in some old ciphers.