From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "nibble"

(typo fix)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
A nibble, (often nybble or nyble) is [[4-bit architecture|4-bit]] of data. It may also be called a half-byte, quadbit, quartet, semi-octet, or tetrade. A nibble has 16 (2<sup>4</sup>) possible values. Since a [[hexadecimal]] digit is also able to represent up to 16 distinct values, it is common for a nibble to be represented as a single hexadecimal. Four bit [[Computer architecture|architectures]] use the nibble as their must fundamental unit.
+
A nibble (often nybble or nyble) is [[4-bit architecture|4-bits]] of data. It may also be called a half-byte, quadbit, quartet, semi-octet, or tetrade. A nibble has 16 (2<sup>4</sup>) possible values. Since a [[hexadecimal]] digit is also able to represent up to 16 distinct values, it is common for a nibble to be represented as a single hexadecimal. Four bit [[Computer architecture|architectures]] use the nibble as their must fundamental unit.

Latest revision as of 11:06, 17 January 2016

A nibble (often nybble or nyble) is 4-bits of data. It may also be called a half-byte, quadbit, quartet, semi-octet, or tetrade. A nibble has 16 (24) possible values. Since a hexadecimal digit is also able to represent up to 16 distinct values, it is common for a nibble to be represented as a single hexadecimal. Four bit architectures use the nibble as their must fundamental unit.