Is there a trick to using Crc16Calc Block?  The results it gives don't seem
to match what I get by other means, including long division by hand.

Does it use the "standard" crc-16 polynomial?  (i.e. x^16 + x^15 + x^2 +
x^0)

For example, calculating the crc-16 on the 3-byte block of data "The", I get
3BAE (MSB first) by hand. Using Crc16CalcBlock, however, I get 3C8E.
Presumably this is LSB first, but it still doesn't match.

TIA for any pointers!

----------
Owen G. Emry
Noblestar Systems Corp.
Mobile Computing Practice
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Reply via email to