1 KB = 1024 Bytes? No, 1 KB = 1000 Bytes! – Christian Neumair

您所在的位置:网站首页 西安市高新区消防大队长是谁任命的 1 KB = 1024 Bytes? No, 1 KB = 1000 Bytes! – Christian Neumair

1 KB = 1024 Bytes? No, 1 KB = 1000 Bytes! – Christian Neumair

#1 KB = 1024 Bytes? No, 1 KB = 1000 Bytes! – Christian Neumair| 来源: 网络整理| 查看: 265

I read up on the history of the ancient convention that 1024 Bytes are called 1 Kilobyte. The problem with the convention is that it’s totally unintuitive unless you know it.

Unfortunately, Microsoft decided to use the following conventions and now the whole world uses it:

1 KB = 1024 Bytes 1 MB = 1024 * 1024 Bytes 1 GB = 1024 * 1024 * 1024 Bytes.

Basically, that is a mish-mash of the ancient 70s convention of using kB for 1000 Bytes and KB for 1024 Bytes, and an abuse of the SI definitions of M and G prefixes. Actually, there is no mB or gB convention, although that would have been logic in the original convention. This is due to the fact that in the 70s – the age of large and expensive computers -, nobody believed that mass storage would actually be achievable at all.

Just assume you never used a computer, ancient UNIX tools or listened to a computer science lecture, or were taught anything about computers. Wouldn’t you expect that

1 KB = 1000 Bytes 1 MB = 1000 * 1000 Bytes 1 GB = 1000 * 1000 * 1000 Bytes?

I filed a bug report against glib, with an historical analysis of the usage of all conventions and formalized nomenclatures in existence (slightly wrong) demanding that g_format_size_for_display() uses the latter conventions. This actually matches IEC recommendations.

One important side-effect of the conventions are:

K=1000: Memory sticks and main memory cells are made in powers-of-two – because the address line uses binary logic (i.e. powers-of-two). Historically, their size is advertized with K=1024 to get nice, non-fractional values. Below the 1 GB limit, they were probably advertized with kB rather than KB – but that shouldn’t be relevant anymore. With K=1000, on your computer screen memory (and memory sticks) shows up LARGER than advertized. K=1024: Hard disks do not have such cell architectures, and they are advertized with K=1000. It was some kind of marketing trick in the very beginning, making the disk look larger than you expect, when you set K=1024 as old-fashioned “IT geek”. The effect is that with K=1024, on your computer screen hard disks look SMALLER than advertized.

Compare for yourself: Which of the two statements is positive, psychologically:

In contrast to Windows, under Linux my 70 GB hard disk has 70 GB as advertized, and my 1 GB memory sticks grow to 1,07 GB Like under Windows, under Linux my 70 GB hard disk shrinks to 65,1 GB and my 1 GB memory sticks have 1 GB as advertized

Wouldn’t it also be nice to have a 100 MB file with 100 * 1000 Kilobytes? No more calculator I/O or right-clicking required for estimating the “actual” size in byte units!

I am mostly writing this blog entry to get some feedback from our users, rather than from programmers. Please also mention your background in your blog comments! Further concrete information regarding historic conventions and IEC and SI standards is available in the bug report mentioned above.

Also note that I do NOT demand to use the additional odd KiBi, MiBi, GiBi IEC convention that in fact make the current situation worse by using prefixes nobody knows, still defining Ki = 1024. My guess is that it was just introduced for offering an alternative for traditionalists who probably wanted “some convention with the beloved 1024”. But it is a non-traditional measurement prefix for a traditional concept, which makes it unattractive both for old(-fashioned) traditionalists and young pragmatists.

Update

I removed the possibly intimidating roundhouse kicks against IT community, and somewhat out-of-context IRC log excerpts. Sorry if anybody felt insulted – some certainly did. You can find an interesting collection of opinions and personal backgrounds in the blog comments.



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