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Full Discussion: 32-bit or 64-bit
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers 32-bit or 64-bit Post 31688 by Ralf on Tuesday 12th of November 2002 07:22:41 AM
Old 11-12-2002
Thanks everyone Smilie this is a big help.
 

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XD(1)							      General Commands Manual							     XD(1)

NAME
xd - hex, octal, decimal, or ASCII dump SYNOPSIS
xd [ option ... ] [ -format ... ] [ file ... ] DESCRIPTION
Xd concatenates and dumps the files (standard input by default) in one or more formats. Groups of 16 bytes are printed in each of the named formats, one format per line. Each line of output is prefixed by its address (byte offset) in the input file. The first line of output for each group is zero-padded; subsequent are blank-padded. Formats other than -c are specified by pairs of characters telling size and style, by default. The sizes are 1 or b 1-byte units. 2 or w 2-byte big-endian units. 4 or l 4-byte big-endian units. 8 or v 8-byte big-endian units. The styles are o Octal. x Hexadecimal. d Decimal. Other options are -c Format as 1x but print ASCII representations or C escape sequences where possible. -astyle Print file addresses in the given style (and size 4). -u (Unbuffered) Flush the output buffer after each 16-byte sequence. -s Reverse (swab) the order of bytes in each group of 4 before printing. -r Print repeating groups of identical 16-byte sequences as the first group followed by an asterisk. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/xd.c SEE ALSO
db(1) BUGS
The various output formats don't line up properly in the output of xd. XD(1)
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