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Greetings I have problem understanding bits corresponding to subnet decimal numbersSo in cisco documents it's written following on the natural mask section Once you have the address and the mask represented in binary, then identification of the netw...
I'm really confused and I'm hoping that someone is gonna clarify this for me.let's say we have 3 pc connected to a switch :Pc1 then sw1{switch1} and the other two pcs pc2 pc3.If pc1 wants to send an Arp packet (Arp-request) and it has the source ip a...
Richard I get it the part of 32 because 0 is also included I think that I writen that.Maybe not clearly again.Confusing part was if 0s on the binary of 255.255.255.0 see that decimal 0 on the end I thought when you add all the number in binary like t...
Richard thank you now I get it what's happening but to clarify my confusion and your answer that lead me to see the problem it was binary math problem not cisco article.I was wrong. So if natural mask is 255.255.255.0 It is in binary following:111111...
Richie Im seeing what you are saying.But look it's says clearly in my description of the problem on cisco article.I even linked the article.It says 5 bits from the subnet mask not the ip address part of bits of subnet mask bits.So Richard my question...
Richard we meet again. Thank you for the input,maybe my mistake is not being clear enough I know how it works what is bothering me in cisco article description is following.If the 255.255.255.0 represent in binary 24 bits of all binary digits 1 for t...
Hi after looking carefully I found some clarification that may help .After looking at the number now I'm getting close to the answer if 5 bits are in binary 11111 equals to decimal 31 but in cisco article says 32 and when I searched on google how ma...