>Hi there,
>
>Dumb question (or for the ones who believe there is no such a thing,
>question from a dumb):
>
>Hex: 0x<NUMBER>
>Octal: 0<NUMBER>
>Binary: ????
>
>Thanks in advance and sorry for the offtopic.
In ANSI C, there is no binary representation available. Watcom C
I believe has an extention to allow you to use something like:
0b010101110
But ANSI does not allow this. There is a way of implementing it
in a portable way by creating a header file containing #define's
of all binary values like this:
#define b00000000 0x00
#define b00000001 0x01
#define b00000010 0x02
#define b00000011 0x03
...
#define b11111111 0xFF
That only accounts for 8 bit binary numbers however. You're
better off sticking to hex notation wherever possible, and
perhaps putting binary numbers in comments behind the hex
notation.
-- Mike A. Harris - Computer Consultant - Linux advocateLinux software galore: http://freshmeat.net
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