I’ve noticed some files I opened in a text editor have all kinds of crazy unrenderable chars

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Most binary-to-text encodings don’t attempt to make the text human-readable—they’re just intended to transmit the data over a text-only medium to a recipient who will decode it back to the original binary format.

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.worldOP
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      15 hours ago

      I do understand I’m not able to read it myself, I’m more curious about the architecture of how that data is represented and stored and conceptually how such representation is practically organized/reified…

      • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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        5 minutes ago

        The original binary format is split into six-bit chunks (e.g., 100101), which in decimal format correspond to the integers from 0 to 63. These are just mapped to letters in order:

        1. 000000 = A,
        2. 000001 = B,
        3. 000010 = C,
        4. 000011 = D,

        etc.—it goes through the capital letters first, then lower-case letters, then digits, then “+” and “/”. It’s so simple you could do it by hand from the above description, if you were looking at the data in binary format.