I was showing my students a Hollerith card this morning to show them some programmer's artifacts, along with an 8 inch floppy, a 5 1/4 inch floppy, a 3/12 inch floppy, an old reel-to-reel tape, etc.
Q: How many bytes could a Hollerith card hold?
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Hollerith cards have 80 columns, each holding a single ASCII or EBCDIC character. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card#IBM_80-column_punched_card_formats_and_character_codes |
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Holerinth cards can hold an 80x12 matrix of holes, for a total of 960 bits, but cards which have too many holes punched out (sometimes called "lace cards") can be very fragile. For that reason, among others, I believe that the character encodings used with punched cards are designed to mostly avoid having three or more consecutive holes punched in a column, at least with characters that would likely be repeated in consecutive columns. If one wished to encode things to disallow two or more consecutive columns from having holes, each column could select one of 377 characters. If one wished to allow two consecutive holes but disallow three, each column could select one of 1705 characters. |
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