|  | Posted by Taras_96 on 02/08/07 07:24 
> Next, I tried>
 > echo bin2hex(addcslashes("\0","\0")); which gave 5c 30 30 30, which is
 > a backslash followed by 3 spaces. What's happening here? I would have
 > thought that the output would be
 >
 > 5c 00 (backslash followed by a null)
 >
 > Taras
 
 Meh, I re-read the manual more closely and realised that: "while other
 non-alphanumeric characters with ASCII codes lower than 32 and higher
 than 126 converted to octal representation."
 
 so 5c 30 30 30 = \ octal representation of 0
 
 or, if the byte x01 was escaped, the result would be
 
 5c 30 30 31 = \001 = \ octal representation of 01
 
 What is the point of converting to an octal representation? Where
 would it be used? I've never heard of this being used in the c
 language..
 
 Taras
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