Lines Matching defs:bits
10 bitstream in which bits are coded one-by-one by the encoder and then
12 decoder. Most current binary storage arrangements group bits into a
13 native word size of eight bits (octets), sixteen bits, thirty-two bits
22 'octet', that is, eight bits. This has not always been the case;
26 modern platforms, this is generally assumed to be eight bits (not
33 octet (eight bits) and a word to be a group of two, four or eight
34 bytes (16, 32 or 64 bits). Note however that the Vorbis bitpacking
68 \subsubsection{coding bits into byte sequences}
71 zero to 32 bits wide, into packets. These integer fields are not
77 significant bit, etc, until the requested number of bits have been
78 coded. When packing the bits into bytes, the encoder begins by
82 the requested number of bits. When all bits of the destination byte
83 have been filled, encoding continues by zeroing all bits of the next
85 Decoding follows the same process as encoding, but by reading bits
194 \item Although these four bits were originally written as a single
233 \subsubsection{reading zero bits}