A Nibble No Jokes :)
NIBBLE
4 bits
Half a byte (4 bits) is known as a nibble.
Computer 'bites' don't exist! Its Bytes, and a you do not get half a Byte. So there is no name.
Half a byte is 4 bits, which is actually known in the computer world as a nibble.
2 nibbles are in one byte
Another name for a byte is 'Octet'.
A nibble is a term given to one half of one byte. Since a byte is eight bits, a nibble would be four bits.The number 0010 1011 1100 1011 contains four nibbles.
8 Bits is one Byte. Half of a byte (4 bits) is a nibble.
No. There is also a byte and a nibble byte (half a byte). Kilo is a prefix meaning "thousand", so a kilobyte is a thousand bytes. More exact would be 1024 bytes.
hemisphere
BCD:A byte (unpacked) representation of a decimal digit in the range0 through9. Unpacked decimal numbers are stored as unsigned byte quantities. Onedigit is stored in each byte. The magnitude of the number is determined fromthe low-order half-byte; hexadecimal values 0-9 are valid and areinterpreted as decimal numbers. The high-order half-byte must be zero formultiplication and division; it may contain any value for addition andsubtraction.Packed BCD:A byte (packed) representation of two decimal digits, each in the range0 through 9. One digit is stored in each half-byte. The digit in thehigh-order half-byte is the most significant. Values 0-9 are valid in eachhalf-byte. The range of a packed decimal byte is 0-99.
16 bits is a byte, for the record half a byte is called a "nibble". I kid you not...
A nibble is a half of a byte, 4 bits.