ISBN

John Ioannidis - Altair ji at corto.inria.fr
Wed Feb 1 01:04:14 AEST 1989


In article <884 at amethyst.ma.arizona.edu> rsm at amethyst.ma.arizona.edu (Robert Maier) writes:
>with a weighted mod 11 checksum.  (The mysterious "X" in the checksum
>field, which one occasionally encounters, means 11.)

I know I'm nitpicking, but X means 10, not 11. (It's base ELEVEN, how can
you have a DIGIT for ELEVEN? And what would have happened to the digit
for TEN anyway?) Aren't we unix-wizards supposed to be able to do 
base-N arithmetic, forall N? :-)

By the way, isn't X a great choice for a digit for TEN? after all, 
that's what the roman numeral X stands for!!!!

I guess this discussion no longer belongs to comp.unix.wizards!

/ji

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