Unpack K Bits: Difference between revisions
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Opposite of [[Pack K Bits]] - Converts a byte with k relevant bits to k output bytes with 1 bit each, located in the LSB. | Opposite of [[Pack K Bits]] - Converts a byte with k relevant bits to k output bytes with 1 bit each, located in the LSB. | ||
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Each input byte produced four output bytes (that are either 0 or 1). Remember that there is no item type of "bit" in GNU Radio, so we have to use bytes to represent single bits. | Each input byte produced four output bytes (that are either 0 or 1). Remember that there is no item type of "bit" in GNU Radio, so we have to use bytes to represent single bits. | ||
== Parameters == | == Parameters == | ||
; K | |||
: See above | |||
; | |||
: | |||
== Example Flowgraph == | == Example Flowgraph == | ||
== Source Files == | == Source Files == | ||
Revision as of 04:37, 20 July 2019
Opposite of Pack K Bits - Converts a byte with k relevant bits to k output bytes with 1 bit each, located in the LSB.
In other words, this block picks the K least significant bits from a byte, and expands them into K bytes of 0 or 1.
Example:
k = 4
in = [0xf5, 0x08]
out = [0,1,0,1,1,0,0,0]
Each input byte produced four output bytes (that are either 0 or 1). Remember that there is no item type of "bit" in GNU Radio, so we have to use bytes to represent single bits.
Parameters
- K
- See above