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English Dictionary: UUencode by the DICT Development Group
1 result for UUencode
From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (15Feb98) [foldoc]:
   uuencode
  
      Unix program for encoding binary data as ASCII.   Uuencode was
      originally used with uucp to transfer binary files over serial
      lines which did not preserve the top bit of characters but is
      now used for sending binary files by e-mail and posting to
      {Usenet} newsgroups etc.   The program uudecode reverses the
      effect of uuencode, recreating the original binary file
      exactly.
  
      Uuencoded data starts with a line of the form
  
      begin
  
      where is the files read/write/execute permissions as
      three {octal} digits and is the name to be used when
      recreating the binary data.
  
      Uuencode repeatedly takes in a group of three bytes, adding
      trailing zeros if there are less than three bytes left.
      These 24 bits are split into four groups of six which are
      treated as numbers between 0 and 63.   Decimal 32 is added to
      each number and they are ouput as ASCII characters which will
      lie in the range 32 (space) to 32+63 = 95 (underscore).   Each
      group of sixty ouptut characters (corresponding to 45 input
      bytes) is output as a separate line preceded by an 'M' (ASCII
      code 77 = 32+45).   At the end of the input, if there are N
      output characters left after the last group of sixty and N>0
      then they will be preceded by the character whose code is
      32+N.   Finally, a line containing just a single space is
      output, followed by one containing just "end".
  
      Sometimes each data line has an extra dummy character added to
      avoid problems which mailers that strip trailing spaces.
      These characters are ignored by uudecode.
  
      Despite using this limited range of characters, there are
      still some problems encountered when uuencoded data passes
      through certain old computers.   The worst offenders are
      computers using non-ASCII character sets such as EBCDIC.
  
  
No guarantee of accuracy or completeness!
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