Path: csiph.com!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: rbowman Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.misc Subject: Re: The joy of octal Date: 16 Nov 2024 05:24:50 GMT Lines: 11 Message-ID: References: <20241111090306.0000385d@gmail.com> <70ac3933f2b6e0f3539c739acc5a792d@msgid.frell.theremailer.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Trace: individual.net jGhrXOyolgpwSZJnWLnuhwagUDogLuORGuXpF8Y7WMqeVk+X/B Cancel-Lock: sha1:KTlufs5R+Z+gOTWAlcbPl/NQIRI= sha256:SPIzAKmSHVZrAj/OZAxgfNXxF+GgJ2lt7rvHmXzUNXI= User-Agent: Pan/0.149 (Bellevue; 4c157ba) Xref: csiph.com comp.os.linux.misc:61003 On Fri, 15 Nov 2024 23:31:26 -0500, 186282@ud0s4.net wrote: > Again, not entirely sure where the end of octal was. Many of the PDPs > used octal, and I *think* a few PIC chips. 8/16/32 kinda took over > kinda early on however. chmod 4755 I don't know if I'd call it octal but if you were writing an assembler for quite a few microcontrollers the opcodes would have a pattern where source ans destination registers were 0 - 7,