RE: Bit swap?

From: Teisberg, Evan (eteisbe@qwest.com)
Date: Tue Feb 04 2003 - 18:19:20 GMT-3


I think that,
1234 abcd 0000
converts to:
84c2 5d3b 0000

Just as,
00010010 00110100 10101011 11001101 00000000 00000000
converts to:
10000100 11000010 01011101 00111011 00000000 00000000

Here is a good post from Richard Davison:

****************************************************************************
*********
"I'm sure a lot of you know this already but I think it's worth saying. I
figured this out after my NMC class. If you remember the following you
never have to do binary conversion for canonical to non-canonical. Just
draw the chart before doing any conversion. I even find I can do the
conversion in my head now."

0 6 9 F Map to them selves

-------------------

1 8 map to each other

2 4 map to each other

3 C map to each other

-------------------

5 A map to each other

7 E map to each other

B D map to each other

****************************************************************************
*********
HTH,
-Evan.

-----Original Message-----
From: Tony Schaffran [mailto:tschaffran@cconlinelabs.com]
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 2:25 PM
To: Joe Chang; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Bit swap?

That looks right to me.

Tony Schaffran
Network Analyst
CCNP, CCNA, CCDA,
NNCSS, NNCDS, CNE, MCSE

www.cconlinelabs.com
"Your #1 choice for Cisco rack rentals."

----- Original Message -----
From: "Joe Chang" <changjoe@earthlink.net>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2003 10:47 AM
Subject: Bit swap?

> Did I do the following bit swap correctly?
>
>
> 1234 abcd 0000
>
> is
>
> 00010010 00110100 10101011 11001101
>
> swapped:
>
> 01001000 00101100 11010101 10110011
>
> is
>
>
> .
.
.



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