bergeel.com bergeel.com
Home -> About Us -> Add Your Link -> Privacy Policy -> Terms of Use -> Add Your Article
Search:   
Get Free Links
 

Health & Therapy

News & Events

Indoor Games

Recreation & Entertainment

Vehicles & Automotive

Outdoor & Sports

Banking & Finance

Realty & Property

Self Help

Software & Networking

Science & Research

Society & Communities

Food & Recipe

Relationship & Lifestyle

Home Family & Garden

Children

Business & Commerce

Careers & Employment

Shopping & Auction

Medicine & Treatment

Art & Culture

Travel & Accommodation

Law & Politics

Academics & Learning

 

Home –› Software & Networking –› Computer Professional Certification
 

Cisco CCNA Certification Exam Tutorial: Prefix Notation

 
Author: Chris Bryant
 

When you're preparing to pass the CCNA exam and earn this coveted Cisco certification, you've got to be totally prepared for the many kinds of binary and subnetting questions Cisco may throw at you. You also have to be familiar with the different manners in which a subnet mask can be expressed, and thats where your knowledge of prefix notation comes in. Prefix notation is an alternate way to express the value of a subnet mask, as opposed to the more familiar dotted decimal format. Not only will you see prefix notation in Cisco documentation, but youll probably see it on your CCNA exam. Consider the following two values:

255.255.255.0

/24

Believe it or not, those two values are exactly the same. The first mask is written out in the more familiar dotted decimal format, and you know by looking at those first three octets that every bit is set to "1", since the maximum value of such an octet is 255.

The second value represents the exact same mask, only this value is expressed in prefix notation. This particular value would be pronounced "slash twenty-four", and the 24 represents the number of consecutive ones that are set in the subnet mask.

Those of us who hate to type numbers are particularly appreciative of this, since it means you'll have to type a lot less numbers to represent a subnet mask. In addition, it's a lot easier to discuss masks in prefix notation than dotted decimal. ("I thought about using a two-fifty-five two-fifty-five two-fifty-five zero mask ,but then decided to use a two-fifty-five two-fifty-five two-fifty-five one-twenty-eight mask...")

Be sure you're comfortable with prefix notation before taking your CCNA exam. As with Cisco documentation, you'll most likely see masks expressed in both dotted decimal and prefix notation, and you've got to be ready to use the both as well!

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Johnny Learns the Secret, Hidden, Locked Away, Super Duper Traffic Creating Power of New Blog Farm
 
Online Affiliate Programs
 
How To Find Your Own Wildly Profitable Niche
 
How to Accurately Measure the Customer Support Level of Your Small Business Web Hosting Provider
 
Broadband Users ? Stop Hacker Attacks With Firewall Software
 
New Medium, New Rules
 
No Customer Left Behind
 
Online Marketing Magic Sold Here.
 
Business Management: Create a Mobile Office
 
Grab the Share in Emerging International Trade Market
 
 
 
   Home -> Privacy Policy -> Terms of Use
All Rights Reserved © 2006 www.bergeel.com