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767 Most current binary storage arrangements group bits into a native word size of eight bits
774 <!--l. 21--><p class="noindent" >In most contemporary architectures, a &#8217;byte&#8217; is synonymous with an &#8217;octet&#8217;, that is, eight bits.
778 assumed to be eight bits (not necessarily because of the processor but because of the
782 <!--l. 32--><p class="noindent" >The most ubiquitous architectures today consider a &#8217;byte&#8217; to be an octet (eight bits) and a word
783 to be a group of two, four or eight bytes (16, 32 or 64 bits). Note however that the Vorbis
1848 eight bits. This is not universally true; see <a
1851 relating to non-eight-bit bytes.
3877 class="cmtt-12">[vorbis_codebook_count] </span>= read eight bits as unsigned integer and add one
4794 greater-than-eight channels remains &#8217;left to the implementation&#8217;.
4833 class="cmssbx-10x-x-120">eight channels</span> </dt><dd
4838 class="cmssbx-10x-x-120">greater than eight channels</span> </dt><dd
4876 <!--l. 33--><p class="noindent" >The comment header is logically a list of eight-bit-clean vectors; the number of vectors is
5365 class="cmtt-8">&#x00A0;eight</span><span
5404 class="cmtt-8">&#x00A0;eight</span><span
9060 <!--l. 89--><p class="noindent" >As an example, assume a partition vector of size eight, to be encoded by residue 0 using
9238 <!--l. 118--><p class="noindent" >As an example, assume a partition vector of size eight, to be encoded by residue 0 using
9704 encoding stages (8 in Vorbis I, as constrained by the elements of the cascade bitmap being eight