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Differences between version 12 and predecessor to the previous major change of BigEndian.

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Newer page: version 12 Last edited on Thursday, February 24, 2005 1:02:23 pm by JohnMcPherson Revert
Older page: version 4 Last edited on Friday, February 6, 2004 8:55:53 am by FahdKhan Revert
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 Big [Endian] is where you send/store the number 0x01020304 as "01 02 03 04". This was traditionally used for larger machines, and since larger machines had network connectivity, NetworkByteOrder has been traditionally BigEndian. 
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+Big and Little Endian are a reference to the book "Gullivers Travels", where a tribe of tiny people divide themselves into two factions over which end they should cut their eggs open at - the big end, or the little end.  
  
 English and most European languages are traditionally BigEndian: we write numbers "1234" when we mean "one thousand, two hundred and thirty four". By contrast, Semitic languages such as Arabic and Hebrew are LittleEndian -- despite the fact that the digits are written in the same order -- because those languages are read right-to-left. So "1234" in Arabic is STILL "one thousand, two hundred and thirty four", it's just read out in reverse order. 
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+Funny phenomena in different everyday's languages:  
+* "twenty-one" in English is BigEndian.  
+* "einundzwanzig" in German means "one-and-twenty" and is LittleEndian.  
+* However, this German phenomenon holds only for tens and ones, not for hundreds: "dreihunderteinundzwanzig" means "three-hundred-and-one-and-twenty" and mixes both Endians!!  
+* the French word for "eighty" is "quatre-vingt", which literally means "4 twenty".  
+  
+  
+What is "little endian" and "big endian" in computer CPUs? See [Endian].  
+  
  
 Compare LittleEndian. 
  
-Most [SiliconGraphicsIndy]'s are BigEndian.  
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