quantifiers
quantifiers In techspeak and jargon ,
the standard metric prefixes used in the SI (
Syst è
me International )
conventions for scientific measurement have dual uses .
With units of time or things that come in powers of 10 ,
such as money ,
they retain their usual meanings of multiplication by powers of 1000 =
10 ^
3 .
But when used with bytes or other things that naturally come in powers of 2 ,
they usually denote multiplication by powers of 1024 =
2 ^
10 .
Here are the SI magnifying prefixes ,
along with the corresponding binary interpretations in common use :
prefix decimal binary kilo -
1000 ^
1 1024 ^
1 =
2 ^
10 =
1 ,
024 mega -
1000 ^
2 1024 ^
2 =
2 ^
20 =
1 ,
048 ,
576 giga -
1000 ^
3 1024 ^
3 =
2 ^
30 =
1 ,
073 ,
741 ,
824 tera -
1000 ^
4 1024 ^
4 =
2 ^
40 =
1 ,
099 ,
511 ,
627 ,
776 peta -
1000 ^
5 1024 ^
5 =
2 ^
50 =
1 ,
125 ,
899 ,
906 ,
842 ,
624 exa -
1000 ^
6 1024 ^
6 =
2 ^
60 =
1 ,
152 ,
921 ,
504 ,
606 ,
846 ,
976 zetta -
1000 ^
7 1024 ^
7 =
2 ^
70 =
1 ,
180 ,
591 ,
620 ,
717 ,
411 ,
303 ,
424 yotta -
1000 ^
8 1024 ^
8 =
2 ^
80 =
1 ,
208 ,
925 ,
819 ,
614 ,
629 ,
174 ,
706 ,
176 Here are the SI fractional prefixes :
The prefixes zetta -,
yotta -,
zepto -,
and yocto -
have been included in these tables purely for completeness and giggle value ;
they were adopted in 1990 by the 19th Conference Generale des Poids et Mesures .
The binary peta -
and exa -
loadings ,
though well established ,
are not in jargon use either —
yet .
The prefix milli -,
denoting multiplication by 1 /
1000 ,
has always been rare in jargon (
there is ,
however ,
a standard joke about the millihelen —
notionally ,
the amount of beauty required to launch one ship ).
See the entries on micro -,
pico -,
and nano -
for more information on connotative jargon use of these terms . ‘
Femto ’
and ‘
atto ’ (
which ,
interestingly ,
derive not from Greek but from Danish )
have not yet acquired jargon loadings ,
though it is easy to predict what those will be once computing technology enters the required realms of magnitude (
however ,
see attoparsec ).
There are ,
of course ,
some standard unit prefixes for powers of 10 .
In the following table ,
the ‘
prefix ’
column is the international standard prefix for the appropriate power of ten ;
the ‘
binary ’
column lists jargon abbreviations and words for the corresponding power of 2 .
The B -
suffixed forms are commonly used for byte quantities ;
the words ‘
meg ’
and ‘
gig ’
are nouns that may (
but do not always )
pluralize with ‘
s ’.
Confusingly ,
hackers often use K or M as though they were suffix or numeric multipliers rather than a prefix ;
thus “
2K dollars ”,
“
2M of disk space ”.
This is also true (
though less commonly )
of G .
Note that the formal SI metric prefix for 1000 is ‘
k ’;
some use this strictly ,
reserving ‘
K ’
for multiplication by 1024 (
KB is thus ‘
kilobytes ’).
K ,
M ,
and G used alone refer to quantities of bytes ;
thus ,
64G is 64 gigabytes and ‘
a K ’
is a kilobyte (
compare mainstream use of ‘
a G ’
as short for ‘
a grand ’,
that is , $
1000 ).
Whether one pronounces ‘
gig ’
with hard or soft ‘
g ’
depends on what one thinks the proper pronunciation of ‘
giga -’
is .
Confusing 1000 and 1024 (
or other powers of 2 and 10 close in magnitude ) —
for example ,
describing a memory in units of 500K or 524K instead of 512K —
is a sure sign of the marketroid .
One example of this :
it is common to refer to the capacity of 3 .
5 "
floppies as ‘
1 .
44 MB ’
In fact ,
this is a completely bogus number .
The correct size is 1440 KB ,
that is ,
1440 *
1024 =
1474560 bytes .
So the ‘
mega ’
in ‘
1 .
44 MB ’
is compounded of two ‘
kilos ’,
one of which is 1024 and the other of which is 1000 .
The correct number of megabytes would of course be 1440 /
1024 =
1 .
40625 .
Alas ,
this fine point is probably lost on the world forever . [
1993 update :
hacker Morgan Burke has proposed ,
to general approval on Usenet ,
the following additional prefixes :
We observe that this would leave the prefixes zeppo -,
gummo -,
and chico -
available for future expansion .
Sadly ,
there is little immediate prospect that Mr .
Burke '
s eminently sensible proposal will be ratified .]
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