From: Ronnie Royston (RonnieR@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Nov 16 2000 - 12:33:29 GMT-3
Uhhhh, yea..... I think someone came in here and posed a question using my
email address. Thank you everybody for the help. I hope that guy (whoever
he is) understands hex better now.?#?! Naturally, how can you get to 'f'
with 2 digits? Duuuuuuuhhhh???
-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Larrieu [mailto:chuck@cl.cncdsl.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2000 11:10 PM
To: Ronnie Royston
Subject: RE: IPX - Understanding IPX Network Numbering
A single hex digit is equal to four binary digits.
A=1010
F=1111
Chuck
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Ronnie Royston
Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2000 2:17 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: IPX - Understanding IPX Network Numbering
Per Doc CD:
"The network number identifies a physical network. It is a 4-byte (32-bit)
quantity that must be unique throughout the entire IPX
internetwork. The network number is expressed as hexadecimal digits. The
maximum number of digits allowed is eight.
The Cisco IOS software does not require that you enter all eight digits; you
can omit leading zeros."
In hex, each digit, 0 thru f, accounts for 2 binary digits, e.g., f is equal
to '11' in binary, right? With respect to the above statement on IPX
network numbers, am I correct in assuming what they mean is "The Cisco IOS
software does not require that you enter all four hex digits; you can omit
leading zeros."?
Thanks.
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