Hexadecimal is a way of expressing the value of 4 bit with one number
or digit.  It does not assign a meaning to the data.

It could be a binary number, a packed decimal number, a floating point
number (hex float or decimal float or ???), ASCII or UTF-8 characters,
EBCDIC characters, or a z/Series instruction,

On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 7:26 PM, Charles Mills <[email protected]> wrote:
> The point is that people mis-use the word hex as though it described a type
> of data.
>
> "Field X contains character data" -- quite possibly true.
> "Field Y contains floating point data" -- quite possibly true.
> "Field Z contains hex data." -- No, there is no such thing as "hex data" (or
> perhaps more correctly, the assertion is a truism -- all data is hex data).
>
> Usually people say "hex data" (imprecisely) when they should say
> "unprintable bytes" or "otherwise uncharacterized or unrecognized data":
> "What's in that field?" "I don't know -- it's just a bunch of hex."
>
> But as John says, hex is not a data type, it is a way of compactly
> representing *any* data, no more, no less. C9C2D4 makes a certain amount of
> sense to those of us in this industry. 110010011100001011010100 is the same
> thing but much harder to wrap your arms around.
>
> Charles
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.)
> Sent: Friday, September 19, 2014 2:55 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Data Conversion
>
> In
> <cae1xxdghzfrrsvdf5u83dmhsgnte12b8akd3u0erbzjkqo3...@mail.gmail.com>,
> on 09/18/2014
>    at 11:21 AM, John Gilmore <[email protected]> said:
>
>>Except for IBM's Hexadecimal Floating Point, which in fact does real
>>hexadecimal (instead of binary of decimal) arithmetic, hexadecimal is
>>not a data type at all: it is a compact external representation of bit
>>strings, any instance of which can have different interpretations in
>>different contexts.
>
> Hexadecimal is most certainly a data type, although not one generally
> applicable to zArchitecture. Both decimal and hexadecimal data can be
> manipulated without binary logic elements, although I can't imagine wanting
> to do so except on a demo mechanical device.
>
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-- 
Mike A Schwab, Springfield IL USA
Where do Forest Rangers go to get away from it all?

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