Well... this is kinda hard to explain..but I will give it a try...
timolobo this snake/wolf hybrid, invent a way to predict the future, using a rubick cube, binary and a Comodore manual ^^¿
so..
painting vertical and horizontal lines in each square he translate the diferent sides in 0 and 1 and then he check the manual to see wich combination he can pull in ascii code
The results were awesome funny!!!!
timolobo this snake/wolf hybrid, invent a way to predict the future, using a rubick cube, binary and a Comodore manual ^^¿so..
painting vertical and horizontal lines in each square he translate the diferent sides in 0 and 1 and then he check the manual to see wich combination he can pull in ascii code
The results were awesome funny!!!!
Category All / Abstract
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 658 x 768px
File Size 66.6 kB
Binary is just a numerical set. The amount of digits you have to use, depend on how big is the number you want to represent.
For example, you need 4 binary digits to count till 16, 5 to count to 32, 6 to count to 64, 7 to count to 128 and so.
Maybe you are getting confused because normally you need eight digits to represent an ASCII character because there are 255 characters in the ascii table, however, Commodore's CP/M (CP/M Plus), only uses the first 128 characters, that's why you can represent any character with 7 binary digits.
Try it, take these 7 digits, convert them onto hex or decimal, and find out which characters are using any ascii table. ^^
For example, you need 4 binary digits to count till 16, 5 to count to 32, 6 to count to 64, 7 to count to 128 and so.
Maybe you are getting confused because normally you need eight digits to represent an ASCII character because there are 255 characters in the ascii table, however, Commodore's CP/M (CP/M Plus), only uses the first 128 characters, that's why you can represent any character with 7 binary digits.
Try it, take these 7 digits, convert them onto hex or decimal, and find out which characters are using any ascii table. ^^
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