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  • Eight bits make a byte, as shown in the picture.[1]
  • Although "bit" is an acronym, it can be written in all uppercase like most acronyms or as all lowercase.[1]
  • Because bits are so small, you rarely work with information one bit at a time.[2]
  • The abbreviations for numbers of bits use a lower-case "b" instead of an upper-case "B".[2]
  • Since one byte is made up of eight bits, this difference can be significant.[2]
  • Short for binary digit, a bit is a unit of measuring data.[3]
  • A single bit is the smallest unit of information on a machine and can hold only one of two values: 0 or 1.[3]
  • More meaningful information is obtained by combining consecutive bits into larger units such as bytes, kilobytes, gigabytes, and megabytes.[3]
  • Graphics are often described by the number of bits used to represent each dot.[3]
  • At the smallest scale in the computer, information is stored as bits and bytes.[4]
  • While a single bit can define a boolean value of True (1) or False (0), an individual bit has little other use.[5]
  • Therefore, in computer storage, bits are often grouped together in 8-bit clusters called bytes.[5]
  • It is important not to confuse these two terms, since any measurement in bytes contains eight times as many bits.[5]
  • Generally, files, storage devices, and storage capacity are measured in bytes, while data transfer rates are measured in bits.[5]
  • The bit represents a logical state with one of two possible values.[6]
  • A contiguous group of binary digits is commonly called a bit string, a bit vector, or a one- or more-dimensional bit array.[6]
  • A bit can be stored by a digital device or other physical system that exists in either of two possible distinct states.[6]
  • Bits are transmitted one at a time in serial transmission, and by a multiple number of bits in parallel transmission.[6]
  • Half a byte (four bits) is called a nibble.[7]
  • In telecommunication, the bit rate is the number of bits that are transmitted in a given time period, usually a second.[7]
  • The byte is a unit of digital information that most commonly consists of eight bits.[8]
  • These systems often had memory words of 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 48, or 60 bits, corresponding to 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, or 10 six-bit bytes.[8]
  • When the riff is put back within the context of the entire song, however, things get a bit more interesting.[9]
  • In the current investigation, being of the second type, things look a bit different.[9]
  • Those practices provide bits of information of a partial, prima facie contradictory, and antecedently unsystematized nature.[9]
  • The pronoun it might have been a bit awkward here followed by plus.[9]

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Spacy 패턴 목록

  • [{'LEMMA': 'bit'}]
  • [{'LEMMA': 'b'}]